Genetics

Half a century of Big Data for livestock software pioneer ABRI + PICTURES

Beef Central, 12/05/2021

ABRI chairman Ian Locke, left, with managing director Hugh Nivison and James Harris, University of New England Chancellor during last night’s 50 year celebration in Armidale. More photos at base of page.

 

A Big Data pioneer and licence-holder of the world’s most widely-used livestock performance analysis software, the Agricultural Business Research Institute is this week  celebrating 50 years of operation.

Established at the University of New England by Arthur Rickards in 1970, ABRI has been an integral part of Australia’s beef cattle performance analysis program since 1972.

The Institute’s pioneering approach to digitisation of livestock performance records, which in 1972 became the basis of the BreedPlan recording program launched in 1985, is now supporting livestock development in 15 countries.

A function marking ABRI’s half-century milestone (a year late, due to COVID) was held last Wednesday during Beef 2021, and a second event held in Armidale last night.

Decades ahead of its time

ABRI’s work in digitising records and using the power of the computer for analysis was well ahead of its time. In 1972, computing was in its infancy. The Apollo spacecraft that first took men to the moon in 1969 – only a few years before ABRI started digitising livestock records – carried a computer guidance module that was about 100,000 times less powerful than a typical smart phone today.

“No-one else in the world has been doing what ABRI has been doing for 50 years,” said the Institute’s Managing Director, Hugh Nivison, during last night’s 50-year celebration.

“ABRI software led the world in 1972, and it still leads now, even though we have much more competition. The work that was done for the beef industry half a century ago built a platform for innovation and value that has revolutionised not just the cattle industry, but livestock industries across the world,” Mr Nivison said.

Before BreedPlan, the only way to assess the worth of a bull was to look at it and make educated guesses about its traits, or to draw on a breeder’s hand-written records.

ABRI built a system that drew on objective measurements of how a bull’s offspring performed, then fed those measurements into a computer to build a comparison of how the calves thrown compared with the calves of all the other bulls in the database.

Early example of ‘Big Data’

Farmers had been keeping their own similar records for centuries, but digitisation meant that many more records could be analysed, at a greater level of complexity. It was an example of ‘Big Data’ analysis decades before the term Big Data was invented.

“At first, BreedPlan only allowed comparisons within a herd,” Mr Nivison said. “Then it expanded to allow comparisons across all animals within a breed, then across breeds, and now we run performance comparisons internationally.”

The more data used in a Big Data analysis, the more accurate the results. After 50 years of data collection, across millions of animals, across an ever-expanding list of traits, BreedPlan is working with billions of data points and delivering results that ABRI could only have dreamed about in 1972.

“We can now be very confident that those using BreedPlan are delivering animals within known performance parameters,” Mr Nivison said.

“It’s a form of genetic engineering, except that it drives a managed evolution of livestock so that they express their traits in ways that are increasingly useful to humans.”

A seedstock animal born in 1985 had an average genetic merit of $18.80 (an economic measure of a cow’s value per cow joined), whereas a seedstock animal born in 2019 has an average genetic merit of $88.20 (per cow joined, not adjusted for inflation). This equates to a $70 improvement in average genetic merit for Australian seedstock beef cattle since BreedPlan started in 1985.

An innovation platform built on data

The BreedPlan platform developed within ABRI has been used to underpin other pioneering initiatives.

The Animal Genetics Breeding Unit (AGBU), established at UNE in 1976 to support ABRI with research and development, took on development of the BreedPlan software, with ABRI as the licence holder.

AGBU has become a world leader in livestock genetics in its own right. Its work in genetic selection technologies has added an estimated $1.18 billion in value to the beef and sheep sectors, and the other animal and plant industries it works with.

Sheep Genetics, built on similar technology, works for the wool and sheepmeat industries as BreedPlan works for the beef industries. The multi-decade collaborations of the Beef and Sheep Cooperative Research Centres, which produced transformational livestock research, were in part made possible because of ABRI and AGBU.

ABRI also develops and distributes a number of other software packages, including programs for dairy herd recording, export certification of livestock and most recently, equine event management.

The Institute was the invention of the late Arthur Rickards, who was executive officer of UNE’s Farm Management Service Centre from 1967.

Mr (later Dr) Rickards observed how the farming community was keen to adopt the new agricultural technologies being developed at UNE, but that an infrastructure gap prevented easy knowledge transfer between research and application.

Into this gap he placed ABRI, which opened for business at UNE on 1 July, 1970.

In 1972, ABRI was announced as the operator of Australia’s National Beef Recording Scheme (NBRS). At a speech given shortly before his death in 2019, Dr Rickards cheerfully admitted that it was preposterous that his three-person outfit should have been handed such immense responsibility.

Fifty years later, with the work of ABRI’s 70 employees underpinning Australia’s world-class beef industry, the decision to hand that responsibility to an upstart startup has withstood the test of time.

John Griffith, left, with Bill Dangar during last night’s 50th anniversary celebrations

Maddy Taylor and Nicky Turner, both from ABRI

Gareth and Deidre Rickards

Leonie Lane, ABRI and Cheryl Green

 

Source: ABRI

 

 

 

 

 

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Comments

  1. Judy Sanders, 17/05/2021

    Read of Cheryl Green in this report. I worked with Cheryl at CSIRO late 1960s to 1972 at North Ryde and Armidale. I was Judy Argent and she was Cheryl Steer. Would love to be able to contact her again

    • Cheryl Green, 01/06/2021

      Hi Judy, what a blast from the past, tried to contact you last year but with no joy. Would love to hear your journey over the last 50 years. Cheryl

  2. Bim+Struss, 12/05/2021

    The next big leap for ABRI is to clone Tim Emery!

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