3 minute read
Collars mean connected cows
What’s NEW?
SOLUTIONS TECHNOLOGY
Herd improvement and agri-tech cooperative LIC has formed a distribution partnership with Israeli-based Afimilk to market its hi-tech cow collars in New Zealand, supporting a global trend towards ‘connected cows’.
The AfiCollar, worn around the neck, collects data on animal health, wellbeing and fertility. Afimilk is one of the dairy industry’s leading producers of cow behaviour sensors, farm management software and milk meters, and supplies cow collars internationally. Afimilk and LIC were in discussions earlier this year regarding a potential investment by LIC in Afimilk which didn’t proceed.
LIC chief executive Wayne McNee says as sector leaders, the parties remained in contact and recently reached a new agreement regarding Afimilk’s cow collar technology.
“We are working to build an integrated, collaborative technology ecosystem that makes it as easy as possible for farmers to adopt new technologies. Farmers need to be able to choose the technology and products that are best suited to them. Our
In the sponsors’ area of FAR’s Crops 2020 event companies were promoting their latest products which, in Corteva’s case, was novel cereal fungicide Questar.
“It’s a completely new mode of action,” R&D manager Bernard Harris told visitors.
Harris said it had market-leading activity against septoria and was best used as a protectant, partnered with a stacked DMI (triazole) such as Kestrel.
A mix was best used in sequence with an SDHI mix at a later or earlier timing.
The active ingredient, fenpicoxamid, was a natural product made by fermentation of role is to ensure that proven technology can integrate with LIC’s existing systems and herd management software into the future.
“The AfiCollars An AfiCollar. are among the best in the world and, we believe, wellsuited to meet the unique challenges of New Zealand’s pastoral dairy environment.
“Our proven work in genomics, reproduction and animal health is enabling farmers to be more efficient and their herds to be more productive each year. Cow behavioural monitoring devices like the AfiCollar will deliver complementary onfarm benefits such as more accurate heat detection and animal health and welfare monitoring.
“AfiCollars will integrate with Protrack, LIC’s farm automation technology, which will allow for increased efficiency and faster, more informed decision-making onfarm. Bernard Harris. soil-borne Streptomyces bacteria and was the first of a new class of fungicides called picolinamides.
There is already strong demand for cow wearable technology by our farmers, and for it to integrate with LIC’s farm automation systems.
“The ‘connected cow,’ wearing this technology, will shape the future of the dairy industry and help New Zealand maintain its world-leading edge in precision farming. LIC is looking to work with other leading New Zealand and international technology providers to continue to offer the very best options for our farmers wanting to utilise new technologies coming to market.”
Afimilk chief executive Yuval Rachmilevitz says he is excited to be cementing a new agreement with LIC for the distribution of AfiCollars.
AfiCollar, a robust & effective cow neck collar, is an advanced yet easy-touse technology developed by Afimilk to assist dairy farmers in monitoring cow rumination, eating, and motion, in order to enhance and improve the health, fertility and nutrition of their animals.
• More? Visit www.lic.co.nz/products-and-
New MOA fungicide
services/automation/aficollar/
As such it had a key role to play in resistance management, providing an alternative to SDHI fungicides.
“Resistance to SDHI’s has developed quickly overseas,” he saId.
Corteva says there’s a moderate to high risk of cereal diseases becoming resistant to picolinamides hence why Questar should be tank-mixed with another fungicide with an alternative mode of action.
The Questar label stresses tank mixes must be used immediately with constant agitation.
Harris said Questar is compatible with most plant growth regulators and broadleaved herbicides.