Agriculture Business Week

agriculture business : crops, aquaculture, livestock, poultry, entrepreneurs, and agrithing…

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Strengthening the Farmers’ Field Schools

Every year, the government allocates a big part of the national budget for education to sustain the schooling of millions of Filipinos. But there’s another form of schooling that the government should sustain and strengthen to help farmers increase their income, reduce production cost, and safeguard health and environment: the Integrated Pest Management-Farmers’ Field School (IPM-FFS).

Modeled after the Indonesian Integrated Pest Management, the IPM-FFS is an extension approach developed by the Highland Agricultural Development Project (HADP) of the Department of Agriculture (DA) to train farmers on the judicious use of chemical farm inputs, and enhance- their management skills and knowledge in farming.

It was first launched in Atok, Benguet in 1992 in response to the cyanide scare or “green tide.” That time, farmers were “cocktailing” insecticides and were using cyanide-based compounds to control the severe infestation of diamond back moth (DBM), the worst insect pest infesting cabbage and other cruciferous vegetables. Dr. Cameron P. Odsey, project director of DA’s Cordillera Highland Agricultural Resources Management (CHARM) Project, said that the IPM-FFS is largely credited for the mobilization of key stakeholders of the vegetable industry for the control of DBM infestation on cabbage crops in the Cordillera.

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Producing for a Niche Market

Agribusiness people have their own strategies. Some go for the mass market while others go for special niche markets.

Just like the A&L Fishfarm and Hatchery of Sampalok, Apalit, Pampanga. The company started growing catfish in 1980 which was profitable to raise for a number of years. However, when the competition became very keen because so many others got into the business, Augusto Tycangco thought of shifting to red tilapia in 2000. Red tilapia which is also known m the market as Kingfish, commands a higher price and the competition is not that many.

Marie Tycangco, the founder’s daughter who serves as marketing and sales manager, says that Kingfish is an excellent alternative to the more expensive lapulapu. Ex-farm, the Kingfish fetches P150 to P200 per kilo. The most desired size is half-kilo per fish.

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Essential Oils: Natural Supplements for High-quality Feeds

Due to the current emphasis on feed safety, animal scientists and feed technologists are fervently looking for safe feed and drug alternatives to optimize animal health and productivity. The use of essential oils and other plant extracts in animal nutrition and health has been the focus of such a never-ending search. The compound feed industry is now the beneficiary of intensive research on different essential oils found in nature.

WHAT ESSENTIAL OILS ARE
To fully understand their nutritional and health implications, it’s important to know first what essential oils are.

Essential oils-(EOs) are concentrated liquids containing volatile aromatic compound extracts from plants. The term “essential” is misleading because it does not mean that they are essential for nutrition or metabolism, nor are they oils in the sense of being lipids. They are volatile aromatic compounds from plant materials typically obtained by steam or water distillation or occasionally, by expression or solvent extraction.

Chemically, EOs are mixtures of molecules belonging to different classes of chemical compounds, the principal ones being alcohols, aldehydes, animes, esters, and terpenses. Their composition varies significantly due to great differences in the starting plant materials: plant hybrids, growing conditions, processing methods, and other factors.

Considered highly versatile and multifunctional natural supplements, EOs or plant extracts are being used as appetite stimulants, aroma, stimulants of saliva production, gastric and pancreatic juice production enhancers, and antioxidants.

INTRODUCING KRESSENS
One of the most unique feed additives in today’s compound feed industry is Kressens, a synergistic combination of essential oils in a lipidic matrix that ENCAP (a sister company of Industrial Tecnica Pecuaria, S.A.) manufactured to be used in animal feeds, providing an energy boost to the piglet, helping it fight disease, and maintaining its health status during the transition to weaning. Its energy-boosting action is manifested in two ways:
1. Promotes growth: Plant extracts, acting at a gastrointestinal tract level, prove the proliferation of beneficial microflora and the intestinal absorption.
2. Boosts energy: Lipidic matrix, preventing a negative energy balance, thus promoting an optimal health status in the animal.    ,

COMPOSITION
Kressens contains essential oils of cassia and melaleuca, with demonstrated anti-microbial activity which promotes growth. Cassia (Cinnamomum aromaticum) is an evergreen tree native to southern China and Vietnam. Like its close relative Cinnamon (Cinnamomum zeylanicum), Cassia is used primarily for its aromatic bark, which is used as a spice, and often called “cinnamon.” The buds are also used as spice, especially in India and Ancient Rome. The Cassia tree grows from 10-15 meters tall, has grayish bark and hard elongated leaves measuring 10-15 cm long, which have a decidedly reddish color when young.

Melaleuca, on the other hand, is a genus of plants in the myrtle family Myrtaceae. There are currently 236 species and all of which are thriving in Australia. About 230 species are endemic to Australia, the few remaining species thrive in Malaysia, Indonesia, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and New Caledonia.

The species are shrubs and trees growing (depending on species) from 2-30 meters tall, often with flaky, exfoliating bark. The leaves are evergreen, alternately arranged, ovate to lanceolate, 125 cm long, and 0.5-7 cm broad, with an entire margin, dark green to gray-green in color. The flowers are produced in dense clusters along the stems and each has fine, small petals and a tight bundle of stamens. Flower color varies from white to pink, red, pale yellow or greenish. The fruit is a small capsule containing numerous minute seeds.

One well-known melaleuca, the Ti tree or tea tree (Melaleuca alternifolia), is notable for its essential oil which is both antifungal and antibiotic and safely usable for topical applications. This is produced on a commercial scale and marketed as tea tree oil:

LIPIDIC MATRIX
The digestive tract of the newly weaned piglet is highly vulnerable because it is still in transition from milk consumption to solid feed. It has not adapted yet to the new nutrients present in compound feeds.

The lipidic matrix of Kressens is a combination of medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA) obtained by fractional distillation of palm kernel oil. MCFA is a source of readily available energy very efficient to compensate negative energy balances in young and susceptible animals.

Other important physiologic features of MCFA are as follows:
• MCFA begins to be absorbed at the stomach mucosa.
• MCFA are primarily absorbed in intestinal solutions and cell membranes and can be absorbed without formation of micelle particles (Odie, 1998). -
• MCFA enters the liver directly and rapidly via the portal vein. Guillot et al (1993) found peak concentrations of MCFA in portal blood within five minutes after infusing medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) in the duodenum of piglets.
• It is preferably used in the liver to obtain energy.

WHY KRESSENS?
Piglets need Kressens for the following reasons:
• The piglet has few body reserves.
• Energy intake of the just weaned piglet is very low.
• Fat provides much more energy than carbohydrates and proteins.

When used in feeds, application of Kressens will result in:
• Better animal physiological condition
• Optimal health status
• Better feed conversion
• More vigorous piglets
• Higher homogeneity of the animals

USES OF KRESSENS
Kressens should be used:
• In weak piglets or piglets with low weight to get a better homogenization of the animals, and
• In piglets in general, to optimize sanitary status of the animals and to improve their metabolic efficiency, from a highly assimilated feed ingredient.

INCLUSION RATES
The inclusion rates of Kressens are as follows:
• Kressens P1.-5 to 3.0 kg/mt of feed
• Kressens L 1.0 to 2.0 kgs/mt of feed

Dragon Fruit : The New Money Crop

One of the new crops the farmers in Ilocos Norte are producing is dragon fruit or pitaya, the fruit of cacti that are native to Central and South America. These cacti are now also cultivated in Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, and Taiwan.

In the town of Burgos, Ilocos Norte, which is known for its centuries-old lighthouse, there is a 5-hectare (ha) farm where 3 ha are being developed for the production of dragon fruit.

Husband and wife Rodolfo and Edita Dacuycuy own this farm located at the foot of the historic lighthouse. Although they started planting dragon fruit only on November 12, 2006, they have already harvested 120 kg of fruits from their farm and 80 kg from their backyard in Pasuquin, the town before Burgos.

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Boosting Agricultural Development in Benguet Sustainable Milkfish Farming

Milkfish (Chanos chanos) is out- “National Fish” and the most important cultured foodfish in the Philippines. About 90 percent of our milkfish production comes from brackishwater ponds with the rest coming from fresh water pens/cages. In 2004, we produced 203,000 metric tons of milkfish with a value of P10.9 billion making our country the top producer in the world.

Although milkfish farming has been practiced in the Philippines for centuries, the production methods have remained at the extensive level for brackishwater pond culture with the use of fertilizers for producing the natural food of the fish. While the average productivity of less than 1 ton per hectare for our brackishwater ponds is relatively low compared to intensive culture in pens and cages that can yield as much as 30 tons per hectare, only the former is considered to be sustainable.

For milkfish farming to be sustainable, there is need for methods that will not only provide a good amount of profit for the farmer but also cause little or no damage to the environment on the long term. With the present production systems, only the extensive culture of milkfish in brackishwater ponds appears to be the most sustainable.

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9 SEA Experts Receive Financial Aid for Promising Researches

Los Banos, Laguna - Nine experts from the Southeast Asian region, including three Filipino scientists, have received funds to jumpstart their promising researches and training program, envisioned to have great impact on agricultural development of the region.

Given during the 41 st anniversary of the Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture (SEARCA) held last November 27, 2007, the Seed Fund for Strategic Research and Training (SFRT) is granted to proposals within the Center’s priority thrust of Natural Resource Management and Agricultural Competitiveness. The maximum budget support ranges from $10,000 to $15,000.

“The Southeast Asian region has a number of promising researchers and scientists whose desire to contribute to the region’s development through research and knowledge dissemination initiatives is hindered by lack of funds. This situation serves as a barrier to translating promising research and training into scientific outputs that could be applied to promote development,” said Arsenio M. Balisacan, director of SEARCA.

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Choose and Produce Your Sander’s Dracaena

Commonly known as Sanders’ dracaena, Dracaena sanderana is also called Ribbon plant, Lucky bamboo, Water bamboo, and Corn plant. It is neither a bamboo nor a relative of the corn (Zea mavs).

This species originated as an understorey plant from the rainforests of Cameroon in tropical west Africa, although some literature state that it came from Congo. It is an herbaceous, evergreen, shrubby plant that grows to 2 meters tall and forms a clump by producing suckers. The stems are slender while the strap-shaped, sheathed leaves are flexible and arranged in a spiral.

Tall plants are prone to bend when there is heavy rainfall or strong winds due to the top heavy foliage. Without anchor or support, containerized plants may topple down. It is seldom seen flowering because it is often cut to a desirable height of less than 1.5 meters which prevents the plant from maturing to flowering stage. Nevertheless, it produces an inflorescence called a panicle under Philippine conditions.

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Techniques in Controlling Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle

Among the pests attacking coconut palm, rhinoceros beetle (Oryctes rhinoceros) remains one of the most destructive in the Philippines anti Southeast Asia.

Rhinoceros beetle feeds on the young unopened fronds in the central crown of the palm. An attack can cause serious damage, while repeated attacks can destroy the apical meristem resulting in the death of the palm. Young palms are particularly attacked. Although adult palms are rarely attacked, significant decrease in yield is observed.

At the farmers’ level, rhinoceros beetle can be controlled using the integrated control strategies that are developed by the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA). As one of the components in the adoption of good agricultural practice for coconut, integrated pest management strategies are applied in the control of pest and diseases.

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3 Schemes to Boost Coconut Production

The Coconut Industry has been battered by destructive typhoons in the last two years, resulting in drastic reduction in yields. In 2005, the country had a production of 2.6 million tons copra equivalent. In 2007, the production was just about 2.3 million tons, thanks to super Typhoon Milenyo in 2006.

Coconut is an important crop in the Philippines. It is a dollar earner and is also crucial in the production of biodiesel for blending with imported diesel as mandated by law. Some 100,000 metric tons copra equivalent is required to produce 70 million liters of biodiesel a year for blending.

To increase coconut production, the government, particularly the Philippine Coconut Authority, is coming up with practical schemes to enhance coconut production nationwide.

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Bagsakan and Pork-In-A-Box : Gunning for Market Access Initiatives

The DA’s programs are giving fisherfolk and farmers the access to sell directly to end-users wherein margins of profits are better.

Reduced prices and other forms of promotion comprise the usual mean used nowadays by producers and manufacturers to sell mass-produced products. Industrial suppliers also try to increase market share by providing as wide a variety of products and services, much of their differentiation being packaging and convenience.

To address farmers’ and fisherfolk’s agricultural problems in terms of rising transportation costs, time, shrinkage, logistics and the changing consumer attitudes, the Department of Agriculture (DA) continues to develop new ideas that satisfy their objective of bringing more income for farmers and fisherfolk. Some of these market access programs and initiatives include the Agriculture and Fisheries Modernization Act (AFAM).

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