|
Application Profile: Animal Transponder with ZIP QuillTM:
The future of livestock identification

Reliable....
Safe....
Humane....
Lifelong unique identification for livestock replaces branding, tattooing
and eartags
- CBSG endorsed
- CITES recommended
- FDA and USDA approved
- Features dissolving ZIP QuillTM
applicator
No larger than a grain of rice,
the trovanŽ ID-100ZIP Animal Transponder provides humane,
lifelong identification for livestock. Each transponder has a unique
identification number, which is laser-programmed into the miniature
integrated circuit at the time of manufacture. This number cannot be
changed or duplicated, and provides unforgeable positive identification
for an animal throughout its life.
The transponder is hermetically
sealed in a special, biocompatible glass capsule, to assure the longevity
of the electronics and preclude rejection by the implanted animal's
organism. With its unmatched read range, the ID-100ZIP Animal Transponder
is suitable for use with pass-by, fixed mounted readers. The patented
TROVAN ZIP QuillTM applicator makes the insertion of transponders
fast and easy.
About the new TROVAN
delivery device
The TROVAN ZIP QuillTM is a unique transponder delivery device
which consists of a hollow tube made of starch with a sharp point. Inside
the hollow tube is the transponder. The entire assembly is completely
sterile, delivered in an individual blister pack. The TROVAN ZIP QuillTMdelivery
device can be inserted very easily simply by pressing it, sharp point
first, into the animal's skin with the thumb. There are no injectors
or other cumbersome hardware to be disposed of or reused from one animal
to another.
Once in the animal, the starch tube dissolves within two to three hours,
leaving the transponder in place. Transponder application with the TROVAN
ZIP QuillTM is fast, easy and safe, and, best of all, there
is no danger of transferring infection from one animal to another.
How does it work?
The system consists of the TROVAN ID-100ZIP Animal Transponder and a
range of different readers, both hand held and fixed-mounted. It's as
easy as pointing a reader at the animal and pulling the trigger. Depending
upon the type of reader selected, read ranges can range from six to
eighteen inches. Fixed-mounted readers that read continuously and can
be mounted in cattle chutes also exist. Readers can be interfaced with
an electronic scale to fully automate data collection on individual
animals. Each reading is time and date stamped. At the end of the day,
the collected data can be uploaded into a PC. As a result, the process
of updating computerised herd records can be fully automated.
How does the TROVAN system compare to conventional identification
methods?
Branding....
Branding has been used for visual identification of animal ownership
for hundreds of years. Both freeze branding and hot iron branding are
in common use. Since they do not provide positive identification of
individual animals, brands are not suitable for use in national product
integrity and traceback system: at best they provide herd identification.
They can become illegible over time, and are subject to alteration and
duplication by third parties. They also reduce the value of the hide
of subject animals by damaging choice portions of said hide. Brands
can also be duplicated outside a given jurisdiction. Brands are not
able to provide worldwide guaranteed uniqueness.
Ear tags....
One of the most widely used in-herd approaches to identification, eartags
with printed alpha-numeric ID codes have traditionally been used by
beef and dairy producers. The perceived advantages are: ease of application,
possibility to visually identify individual animals and perceived low
tag cost. A major acknowledged disadvantage is the high loss rate. Surveys
of U.S. ranchers have yielded loss rates for eartags ranging from 15%
to 25% annually, depending upon the nature of the operation and the
type of tag used, with plastic tags experiencing higher loss rates than
metal eartags. Also, printed alpha-numeric ID codes cannot provide unique,
positive identification because they are subject to duplication, alteration
or exchange . Thirdly, such tags are not suited to automatic data capture
methods, and require manual transcription.
In order to automate data capture, the human-readable alpha-numeric
code conventionally used on eartags has been supplemented with barcode
on a trial basis. Because barcode cannot be read through dirt and environmental
obstructions, and its susceptibility to scuffing and scraping, barcode
requires human intervention in order to be read on the animal's ear.
In this type of environment, barcode yields an unacceptably high percentages
of "no reads."
About the company...
The TROVAN system is based on technology patented by Trovan, Ltd., which
distributes the product around the world. The transponders are manufactured
by AEG, a member of the Daimler Benz group of companies, under ISO 9001
quality certification. In the United States, the TROVAN system is available
through: Electronic Identification Devices, Ltd.
Where is the future taking
us?
Consumer safety and quality control....
Ensuring traceability of individual animals from birth until death allows
farmers and feed lot managers to respond to disease or product integrity
problems quickly and effectively.
The European union will require positive identification of all bovines
in order to provide traceback by the year 2000. Other countries and
trading blocks appear poised to follow suit in the near future.Countries
in the European Union, Australia and South America are moving aggressively
to implement national identification in their cattle industry. In order
to remain competitive, the U.S. beef and dairy industries must meet
and exceed its competition, as well as customer expectations, in the
areas of safety, quality and service.
In recognition of these realities, the Confederacion de Asociaciones
Rurales de Buenos Aires y La Pampa, which represents 60% of the cattle
growers in Argentina, has endorsed the TROVAN system as the technology
of choice for identification of cattle.
Herd improvement....
Ranchers and feed lot operators can utilise the TROVAN system in order
to implement comprehensive animal trace-back systems, allowing operators
to improve their operation's efficiency by tracking such characteristics
as weight gain and milk production (in the case of dairy operators)
as well as vaccinations given and the health profile of individual animals.
The data to adjust feeding rations to optimise each animal's performance
according to its profile, vaccinations given and the animal's overall
health profile. Non-performers can be identified and corrective action
taken early on. Over the long term, tracing individual animals' performance
can yield valuable data on the performance characteristics of different
genetic backgrounds, if genetic data are tracked as well.
Summary
Major dairy and beef producing and consuming nations throughout the
world are moving rapidly towards RFID as the ID technology of choice
in order to vouchsafe animal and ocnsumer health as well as product
quality control. The reasons for implementing RFID are the unmatched
reliability and longevity of RFID and the fact that RFID can be read
automatically and independently of line-of-sight limitations.
The TROVAN¨ electronic identification system eliminates forgeries
and allows for 100% accuracy in identifying animals. Together with appropriate
internal systems controls, it permits an early response to disease or
product integrity problems. It gives ranchers as well as regulatory
agencies greater control over individual animals preventing theft and
maximising productivity and quality control via long-term tracking of
animal performance within a herd.
Once assigned, an ID number stays with an animal for its entire lifetime.
Because implantable tags cannot be removed from the live animal or inadvertently
lost, no re-issue is required. Because no duplicate TROVAN ID numbers
are ever manufactured, for any reason, there is no chance for fraud
or inadvertent duplication. Trovan, Ltd. is also in the unique situation
of being in a position to enforce the uniqueness of the ID codes in
its RFID system.
Home
For information and questions please contact: Info@EIDLtd.com
|