Download - List of annexures a r
Annex-A
LIST OF SOME OF THE SERVICES
1 Registrations Self-Registration by the Famer
Registration of Farmer by L&DD Staff
3.3 Million (See Details in Annexure C-4)
2. Vaccinations i. HS ii. FMD
iii. Anthrax iv. BQ v. PPR
vi. ETV vii. ND viii. CCP
ix. COMBO (FMD + HS) x. HYDRO
xi. GUMBRO
3. Field Service 1. Castration
2. Deworming
3. Pregnancy Test
4. Field Treatment
5. Genital Disease
6. Field Surgery
7. Dressing
8. Ear Trimming
9. Dehorning
10. Tail Docking
11. Shoeing
12. Teeth Rasping
13. Nasal Ring
14. Tagging/ Branding
15. Teaser Formation
16. Dipping/Spraying for ecto parasites
17. Dystocia
18. Post Mortem
19. Mastitis
20. Suspected Blood Parasite
21. Suspected Foot and Mouth Disease
22. Suspected Haemorrhagic Septicemia
23. Suspected Rabies
24. Suspected Black Quarter
25. Suspected Tuberclosis
26. Suspected Para tuberculosis
27. Suspected Brucellosis
28. Metabolic Disorders
29. Suspected Enetroxemia
30. Suspected Pesti depesti ruminants
31. Suspected Contagious Caprine Pleuropneumonia
32. Suspected Foot Rot
33. Hypothermia
34. Hyperthermia
35. Drenching Pneumonia
36. Suspected New Castle Disease
37. Suspected Infectious Coryza
38. Suspected Infectious Diarrhea
39. Parasitic Infectious Diarrhea
40. Suspected Parvo
41. Suspected Canine Distemper
42. Suspected Strangles
43. Suspected Glanders
44. Colic
45. Retention of Urine
46. Impaction of Rumen
47. Tympani
48. Pox Disease
49. Anorexia/ Off-Feed
50. Suspected Warble Fly Disease
4. OPD All of the above mentioned services are also available at OPDs of 4500 Civil Veterinary Hospitals, Dispensaries, Centers, AI Centers, with instant electronic record generation through 9211 System
5. AI Performed
5000 Private AITs Registered on 9211 System across Punjab
1375 Government AITs
160,941 AIs Performed
6. Types of samples collected
1. Fecal Sample 2. Blood Samples 3. Serum Sample 4. Milk Sample 5. Urine Sample 6. DNA Testing
7. Lab Tests Performed
296 Lab Test captured through System (See Details in Annexure L)
8. Farmer Days Conducted
9. Markaz Meetings Held
10. Census – Large Animals
23,137,447 (See Details in Annex-C)
11. Census – Small Animals
15,847,246 (See Details in Annex-C)
12. Census – Poultry 11,666,302 (See Details in Annex-C)
13. 9211 Meat Tag Enquiry
19,996 SMS + 28,923 calls + 7,72296 SMS
14. Geo Tagging 20,123
15. Executive Dashboard
29,878 Hits
16. White listing of Users
7234
17. Services provided by the System
i. Farmer Registration a. Farmer Registration By Itself b. Farmer Registration By L&DD
ii. Disease Reporting System a. Disease Reporting By Itself b. Disease Reporting By L&DD
iii. Performance Monitoring i. District Level Monitoring
ii. Tehsil Level Monitoring
iii. Employee Level Monitoring iv. Employee Profile v. Employee Wise Usage
iv. Contact Centre i. Inward Calls ii. SMS Monitoring (174 Types) iii. Call Wise Summary (28870 Calls
Received) V. Slaughter House
i. TAG Printing 1,784,860 i. Mauza Management (4 Types) ii. Farmer Management iii. Employee Management (6 Types) iv. Role Management (13 Types) v. Menu Management (4 Types) vi. Complaint Type Management (15
Types) Viii. Virtual Vaccination Regime
Management Module a. 106.4 Million Vaccines
Captured By 9211 System from April, 2015 up till now
ix. Virtual AI x. OPD module
i. Treatment ii. Surgery
iii. Dressing iv. Ear Trimming v. Dehorning
vi. Tail Docking
vii. Shoeing viii. Teeth Rasping
ix. Nasal Ring x. Tagging/ Branding
xi. Teaser Formation xii. Dipping
xiii. Dystocia xiv. Post Mortem xv. Deworming
xvi. Castration xvii. Artificial Insemination
xi. Virtual service (lifecycle) and performance module
xii. Raiwind slaughter house animal tag module
xiii. Direct complain reporting via SMS to L&DD staff from contact center
Annex-B
THE CONCEPT PAPER
Virtual Governance
(9211 System)
The Agriculture Sector contributes 21 % of GDP of Pakistan, which
consumes 46% of direct labour force, coming from 67 % of population.
Out of Agriculture, the share of Livestock sector is 56 % i.e. more than the
total value of cash crops. However, the head count involved in both sectors
is same as livestock and agriculture supplement each other in the rural
landscape. The semi-arid and arid climatic conditions of the country
coupled with shrinking water resources due to varied reasons have severely
undermined the future prospects of crops, if practiced on the prevalent
model. Livestock is thus the only rescuer in this backdrop, which has the
tremendous potential to climb the ladder of value addition as well.
There are two components of livestock sector governance, like any other
health sector management:
1. Preventive Regime, having following intrinsic components:-
a. Vaccination
b. Reproduction
c. Fattening
d. Milking
e. Skins & hides
2. Curative Regime, comprising of:-
a. Invasive procedures (surgery etc.)
b. Non-invasive (antibiotics etc.)
The preventive regime needs a distinct infrastructure both physical and
operational, which may be approached through pro-active and dynamic
outreach activities in the field, technically called extension services.
The curative regime is catered to through its static infrastructure of
hospitals, dispensaries and medical centers etc.
Since animals, unlike humans, do not have socio-economic value in the old
age, they are rarely allowed to attain the age beyond their physical
productive age. The actual productivity directly comes from the quality
management of intrinsic components of the preventive regime of livestock
sector governance. Preventive regime thus requires 99.99 % focus of
livestock sector development, leaving the rest for curative one, if required
at all in the public sector. Nonetheless, the infrastructure (both physical and
operational) developed in the last 67 years caters to 99.99 curative regime
(572 Civil Vet. Hospitals, 1503 Civil Vet. Dispensaries, 1505 Vet. Centers,
800 Artificial Insemination Centers etc.). This positioning of the
department renders all schemes doomed to fail, which are aimed at any of
intrinsic components of preventive regimes mentioned above. The
structural and operational anomalies of this governance model have failed
everyone: the public sector; the private sector, the biggest failure of which
being a multinational in milk production and more devastatingly the
rudderless and confused academia, churning out likewise graduates, with
dangerous fallout for future correction and development.
The farmer is thus on the perpetual deficit. The growth indicators are
inherently skewed (27 % of sheep/ goat coming for slaughtering has not
done the first kidding!). The export is but smoke screen with untenable
activities.
What is the way out?
1. Demolish the existing infrastructure- 25 years required.
2. Rebuild the requisite infrastructure- 25 more years required.
3. Optimize the correct positioning of the sector governance- 25 more
years required.
Complete business solution viz. “Virtual Governance” was thus designed
by anyone in world history- an institutional time machine, to:
1. Reducing the activity time differential exponentially to attain our
goals, in near future (otherwise possible in distant future) for
paradigm shift from 99.99 % curative positioning to 99.99%
preventive positioning of the department without entangling efforts
and energy on physical infrastructure and operational re-invention.
Existing resources by adjusting the barriers as per desired limits and
“Virtual Governance Business Model” would be used for the purpose
as a force multiplier.
2. Increasing the surface area of activity for
a. Increasing the number of activities;
b. Frequency of activities;
For blasting transactions;
while time is a constant in this calculus. It is simply doing future in
strides.
The bottom line-
1. 140 Million Cell Phone connection in Pakistan- meaning
thereby one can have instant, direct, dynamic and meaningful
access to as much persons if connected through a business
solution as described above.
2. Conventional paper based communication and data handling
system are costly in terms of time, efforts and create picture at
“undesirable level” that can be manipulated easily.
3. Replacing the paper based conventional system with e-
government modules still does not alter the outcome. When not
constructed into and introduced through some viable composite
business solution, which rarely happens even in developed
economies, cost doubles; redundancy, duplication of key
punching/ management functions and easy manipulation of
entered data further blinds the policy managers from ground
realities and shifting sands. Performance “Picture” still forms at
lower operational (undesirable) levels with inherent potential of
manoeuvring as actual picture always differs from the desired
one, creating big incentive for undesired and unauthoritative
interventions. Cost of connectivity and problem of electricity
still persist.
4. Ordinary mobile phone sets more than fulfills the requirement.
In fact, they are the actual requirement.
Virtual Governance as a composite business solution is thus
designed to eliminate all such inefficiencies, shortcomings and to
bring productivity by instantly and exponentially increasing the
meaningful connectivity and flow of apposite information amongst
all stakeholder, particularly of the livestock sector and generally in
the whole of economy in accordance with intended public policy
stimuli for business optimization. Virtual Governance operates on
the concept of Government being more virtual in nature
(interaction, management, functions, services etc.) than physical in
existence. Since service delivery is done through some SOPs,
which are basically extremely refined codification of rules. Just
like electricity which is either on or off or binary language, which
is either “-0-” “-1-”, packets (virtual) of service delivery can be
made available round the clock in plenty with pre-programming of
desired response. The Virtual Governance modules materialize the
concept of “enabling infrastructure coming into being when needed
and then vanishing”, eliminating the redundancy and opportunity
cost as well. The proposed concept has extended the government
beyond “RTA” i.e. restricted by time activity, making it “Ever
Available”. We aim at dynamically registering and engaging 4 to 5
million farmers in next 6 months by making them active first hand
users of this business model of governance facilitation through
virtual governance modules & 10 million consumers of one chosen
urban center (Lahore) through this system, “directly speaking with
their interest” along with “5 times” % measurable reduction in
inefficiency of our operations and “10 times” measurable increase
in productivity as intended in all of our current interventions.
The time machine has been invented!!!
By now the Virtual Governance System running on short code
9211 owned by the Livestock Department Punjab has captured
2.7 Million Livestock Farmers’ 38.9 Million Animals & rural
birds data with exact geographical Juxtaposition across 25,892
villages of Punjab with traceability to each of the farmers. This
is the largest ICT based live database of Livestock Farmers in
the world and it is growing day by day with capability to map
the service delivery up to the person who delivered it and to
whom. For creating such a large database not a single
computer has been used. Key pads of 6000 simple/ feature
mobile phones already in use of L&DD Department’s staff
have been converted into keypad of a single giant computer
working back in the data center and connected through
network of all the five Telcos working in the country. Data
entry has been done through mobiles and with exceptional
quality as layered data entry ensures checks every time next
layer is added. This huge data assumes special importance
when plotted against two facts: 73% of potential banking
market in Pakistan does not have access to banking products;
there are 4.7 million Branchless banking accounts in Pakistan
at the moment. This database is estimated to capture 4.2
million Farmers’ data in next 4-6 months, making it equal to
size of total branchless banking accounts in the country!!! And
these are all business accounts. History is thus in the making!
Muhammad Irfan Khalid, Deputy Secretary (HR &Admin),
Livestock & Diary Development Department, Government of the Punjab.
[email protected] 0321-4766816
Annex-C
C
C-1
C-2
C-3
C-4
Annex-D
Annex-E
9211 ICT BASED VIRTUAL GOVERNANCE BUSINESS SOLUTION COMPARISON WITH
TRADITIONAL COMPUTER BASED MODEL A. Parameters (Scope of Work)
Sr. No
Description Quantity
01 Electronic Capturing of Records 4.3 M
02 Man Hours Per Day 08 03 Man Hours Per Month (based on 20 Working days) 160
04 Duration (Number of Months) 03 05 Total Man Hrs for the assessment period i.e. 03 Months(160X3) 480 Hrs.
06 Total working Minutes in 03 months (480X60) Min. 28,800 Min.
07 Time/ entry (Minutes/ Entry) 03 08 Total Time required to enter 4.3 M Entries(4.3 M X 3) Minutes 12.9 M
09 Work Stations required to Enter 4.3 M Data spanned over 12.9 M Min in 03 months (28,800 Minutes) (12.9 M Minutes/ 28,800 Min) 447.91
10 Electricity Cost per KWH USD (PRP) 0.27 (27)
11 Electricity used by 447.9 Computers to constantly work for 12.9 Million Min with air conditioning lighting etc.
150500 Units/ KW/Hr
12 Cost of Electricity used 0.27 USD (Rs. 27) X 150500 (Units/ Kw/H.r Etc.) Rs. 4,063,500
13 Electricity Used by One Mobile Phone 1 W/Hr 14 Time taken by one Mobile Phone for 12.9 M Minutes
(12.9 M Minutes/ 4000 Mob.) 3225 Min.
15 Number of Minutes each Mobile (in a lot of 4000) used each day for03 months (3225/3/20)
53.75 Minute/ day
16 Entries of Record/ day/ Mobile (20 working days with 08 working hours each) (53.75/3) 17.91
17 One Computer used/ working day (8 Hrs X 60 Minutes) 480 Min/ day 18 Production of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) in Electricity Generation of 150500 Kw/Hr on
Furnace Oil @ .82 KG/ KWH(USEIA)(0.82 X 150,500) 123,410 Kg
19 One Tree consumes CO2 per year(www.americanforest.org) 21.81 Kg
20 Opportunity cost of 123,410 Kg of CO2 in terms of No. of Trees (123410 Kg CO2/21.81Kg/ Year/ Tree) 5658 Trees
21 Pollution caused by One Work Station (Computer)/ 03 working months (28,800 Min.) (336 KW/ Hr X 0.82)
275.52 Kg of CO2
22 Pollution Caused by 447.915 Computers (275.52 X 447.915) 123410 Kg of CO2
23 Pollution Caused (in terms of electricity production and resultant omission of CO2 only) by One Mobile Phone capturing: (53.75 minutes/ 60 Min.= 0.89 Hrs X 1 Watt used by one mobile per Hr/ 1000 KW X 60Working Days X 0.82)
0.044 Kg of
CO2
24 Pollution Caused by 4000 Mobile Phones working to capture 4.3 Million Entries 176.3 Kg of CO2
25 Opportunity cost of 176 Kg of CO2 in terms of No. of Trees (176.3 Kg CO2/ 21.81Kg/ Year CO2 consumed by one Tree)
8.08 Trees
M: Million Min: Minutes Hr: Hour Kg: Kilogram
B. RESOURCES REQUIRED
Sr. No
Resources
Traditional Computer
based Model
Virtual Governance
ICT based Business Solution Saving %age Saving
01 Data Entry Cost Rs. 17/ Entry
Rs. 0.06/ Entry
Rs. 16.94/ Entry
99.60% (340 times less)
02 Data Entry Terminals 448 4000 N.A. N.A.
03 Man Days Available 26875 Days 26875 Days N.A. N.A. 04 Actual task execution
time by all terminals
60 working days
(26875/448)
6.72 working days
(26875/4000) 53.28 days 88.8%
05 Cost of usage per terminal/ day
Rs. 2719/- (17X
4.3.M/60/448)
RS 23/- (6.72 DAY @
Rs 103/ MONTH)
Rs. 2696 99.15 %
06 TOTAL COST OF USAGE of all devices for entering 4.3 M record
Rs. 73,086,720
Rs. 92200 (Line Rent of 4000 Mobiles for 6.72 days)
+ 112000 (9211 System Support Cost)
73646 (Development
Cost)+ 9450 (Electricity cost of 4000
mobiles usage for 6.72 days) = Rs. 287,296
Rs.72,799,424 99.60%
07 DATA ENTRY COST PER RECORD
Rs. 17 (Quoted Price)
Rs. 287,296/ 4.3 M
(Record) =0.066(0.06
PAISAS)
Rs. 16.94/ Entry
99.60% (i.e. 340 times less)
Annex-F
The Policy Papers
GOVERNMENT OF THE PUNJAB
LIVESTOCK & DAIRY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT
Tables of Content
Acknowledgement 6
Preface 8
Executive Summary 10
1. INTRODUCTION 12
1.1. The Resource Base 12
1.2. The Ambience and Need for the Provincial Livestock Policy 13 1.2.1 The Existing Practice 14
2. MAJOR CHALLENGES 18
2.1 The Public Policy Framework 18 2.2 The Governance Framework 18 2.3 The Knowledge Framework 19
2.3.1. Calibrating the Options 19 2.4 The Marketing Framework 20 2.4.1 The Cattle Markets 20
2.4.2 The Meat and Dairy Market 21 2.5 The Financial Framework 22
2.5.1 The Share of Livestock in Agri. Loans’ Consumption 22 2.5.2 The phenomenon of middleman 23 2.6 The Production Framework 24
2.6.1. Economic Model Vs. Conventional Model 24 2.6.2. Low Productivity 24
2.6.3. Bench Marking 24 2.6.4. Shortage of Feed, Fodder, Minerals, Nutrients & clean Drinking Water 25 2.6.5. The Missing Link of Feedlot Fattening 25
2.6.6. The Processing - the hostile Landscape 25 2.6.7. The Dynamics of Meat 25
2.6.8. The Commercial Poultry 26 2.6.9. Lack of Disease Surveillance Infrastructure and Forecasting 26 2.6.10. Lack of Documentation of Interventions 26
2.6.11. Shortage of Vaccines 26 2.6.12. Quality Assurance and Registration 27
2.6.13. Disease Diagnostics 27 2.6.14. The Economic Loss of Diseases 27
2.6.15. The Breeding Framework 28 2.6.15.1. The Genetic Upheaval 28
2.6.15.2. The Semen Production Units 29 2.6.15.3. The Artificial Insemination 29
2.6.16 The Research Framework 29 2.6.16.1 The Livestock Experimentation Farms 30 2.6.17. The Extension Framework 30
3. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF PROVINCIAL LIVESTOCK POLICY 31
3.1. The Development Framework 31 3.1.1. Sustainable Livestock Sector Development 31
3.1.2. The Enabling Infrastructure 31 3.1.2.1. The Role of PAMCO 31 3.1.2.2. The Role of PLDDB 32
3.2. The Market Led growth 33 3.3. The Governance Framework- Paradigm Shift from Curative to Preventive 33
3.3.1. L&DD as Livestock Asset Manager 33 3.3.1.1 The Human Resource Development 33 3.3.2. Disease Prevention 34
3.3.2.1. Disease Surveillance and Forecasting 34 3.3.2.2. Vaccination 34
3.3.2.3. Animal Husbandry Practices 34 3.3.2.4. Deworming 34 3.3.3. Food and Nutrition 35
3.3.4. Extension Services 35 3.3.5. Capacity Building Livestock Production Systems 35
3.3.5.1. Research, Education and Training 35 3.3.5.1.1. The Role of Higher Education in Livestock Production 35 3.3.5.2. Re-discovering the role of L&DD’s Livestock Experiment Farms 36
3.3.5.3. R&D & Intellectual Property Rights 36 3.4. Partnerships for Socio-Economic Change- Livestock Activists: Women, 36
Lambardars, Imams Masjids and Village Students. 3.5. The Regulatory Framework 36 3.5.1. Provincial Drug Control & Marketing Facilitation Authority 36
3.5.2. Control of Zoonotic Diseases 37 3.5.2.1. The Issue of Unwholesome meat 37
3.5.3. Livestock: Agro Based Industry 38 3.6. The Service Delivery Framework 38
4. FOOD SECURITY 39
4.1. Definition and Narration 39 4.2. Livestock Feed Mix Redefined 39 4.2.1. Silage, Fodder & Hay 39
4.2.2. Nutrients & Minerals 40 4.2.3. Restocking of Rangelands 40
4.2.3.1.Preferred flora for restocking of Range Lands 40
4.2.4. Mapping of seasonal migration routes of Livestock 41 4.2.5. The Nomadic Livestock Clans 41
4.2.6. Mapping of trade routes of Livestock 41 4.3. The Livestock Product Mix Redefined 41
4.4. Socio-Economic Security of the Producer 42 4.4.1. The issue of price capping 42 4.4.1.1. Price capping by the Government 42
4.4.1.2. Price capping by the unfair market practices 42 4.5. The Breeding Framework 43
4.5.1. The Progeny Testing Programme 43 4.5.2. The Breeding Plan 43 4.5.3. The Breeding Policy & Rules 44
4.6. Preferred Areas of HR Development 44 4.7. Special Emphasis on the South & Cholistan 45
4.8. Managing the Tribal Area’s Livestock 46 4.8.1. Warble Fly Control & Eradication Management 46 4.9. Conservation of Animal Bio-Diversity 46
4.10. The Trade Protocols of Livestock & Livestock Products 47 4.10.1. The Export Regime Protocols 47
4.10.2. The Import Regime Protocols 47 4.10.3. The Quarantine 47 4.10.4. The transportation Regime Protocols 47
4.11. Indigenous Vaccine Production 47 4.12. Disaster Management Protocols 48
5. COMPETITIVENESS 49
5.1. Changing the Service Delivery Model- the Virtual Governance 49 5.2. The Market Infrastructure 50
5.2.1. The Information Dissemination and Vertical Market Linkages 51 5.2.2. The Echo-Marketing Zoning- Localized Cattle Bazars 51
5.2.3. Towards the Virtual Markets 52 5.3. The Financial Architecture 53 5.3.1. Institutional response to the middleman phenomenon 53
5.3.2. The Documentation (Tractability) and Quality Assurance 54 5.4. Availability of Quality data for R&D 54
5.5. Academia- Industry Linkages 54 5.6. The Processing Industry 54
6. PROSPERITY OF STAKEHOLDERS 56
6.1. Health, Hygiene and Better Environmental Management 56 6.2. Animal Welfare 56 6.3. Tractability and Disease Free Zones 56
6.4. The Role of NGOs 57 6.5. The Expected Gains for the Economy 57
7. EXPORTABLE SURPLUSES 58
7.1. The Halal Market 58
7.2. The Requisite Quantity of Livestock Products 58
7.3. Feedlot Fattening 58
7.4. Dairy & Dairy Products 58
7.5. Sheep & Goat 59 7.6. Camel 59
7.7. Equines 59 7.8. Egg & Poultry 60
7.8.1. The Rural Poultry 60 7.8.2. The Commercial Poultry 60 7.8.3. Ostrich Farming 61
7.9. The Role of Exporter Redefined 62 7.10. The International Trade Protocols 62
8. THE COMMUNICATION FRAMEWORK 63
8.1. Vision 63 8.2. Mission 63
8.3. Institutional participation of the public in generating dynamic knowledge base 63
8.4. FM Radio 63 8.5. Annual Progress Reports submission to the Provincial Assembly 63
9. THE POLICY LIFECYCLE: 64
9.1. Defining the policy in short, medium and long terms 64
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The Public Policy formulation is a very tedious job from any yardstick. It is more challenging when
there exists none. The day to day firefighting and administrative challenges left little room for such endeavours which should have otherwise been a routine practice of public institutions. Luckily after
having laid down the foundation of strategic corrects of the historical wrongs, the Punjab Government has decided to launch next generation reforms pertaining to livestock & dairy sectors by crystalizing the will of the public and future plans of action pertaining thereto. The Honourable
Chief Minister Punjab personally monitored the formulation of the policy for which inputs from a wide cross section of stakeholders were obtained like Farmers’ Associations, Poultry Association,
Academia, Industry, Dairy Association, exporters, supply chain actors, retailers, veterinary professionals, shepherds, nomads, multilateral partners like World Bank, PEEP of USAID, FAO, Brooke, etc.
Mr. Irfan Elahi, Chairman P&D Board, remained a source of inspiration and guidance at each stage.
Mr. Mumtaz Manais, Chiarman PAMCO, Syed Yawar Ali, Chairman Nestle Pakistan Ltd. Ms Aqeela Mumtaz, Mr. Asad Zahoor of PEEP USAID, Mr. Riaz of World Bank, Dr. Hassan, Baba Bashir, a shepherd interviewed in Cholistan, carrying a collection of local wisdom of that area, Mr.
Niaz Ahmed, a milkman, who shared the inside information, Mr. Allah Ditta, whom I met deep inside Kasur, who shared his part of the story and many more, who contributed towards the
formulation of this policy deserve deepest gratitude.
Acknowledgements are due to many friends and partners of livestock & dairy development in the
Punjab without the help of which this effort would never become so comprehensive and apt. I am personally grateful to Mr. Arshad Jutt, Special Advisor to Chief Minister for his support and guidance. Gratitude is due to Prof. Dr. Talat Naseer Pasha, VC UVAS whom I used to consult
several times a day. Faculties of Agriculture University, Faisalabad, particularly Prof. Dr. Iqrar Ahmad Khan, VC, Prof. Dr. Zafar Iqbal, Dean Faculty of Veterinary Sciences, Prof. Dr.
Muhammad Sajjad Khan, UAF, Prof. Dr. Jahangir Khan Sial, of PMAS Arid Agriculture University Rawalpindi, Prof. Dr. Syad Khawaja Alqama, VC Bahaudin Zakariya University Multan, are no less in support and guidance. Institutional knowledge and experience have no substitute, so department’s
precious HR, particularly Dr. Nawaz Saeed, DG (Ext.), Dr. Rasheed DG (Research), Dr. Abdul Rehman, Director Breed Improvement, Dr. Sanaullah Bhatti, former Additional Secretary Technical,
Dr. Rafaqat Ali Shah, DDLO (PP) who is the most dedicated and sincere resource of the department, Dr. Qurban Hussain, Director P&E, Dr. Mansoor, DSR Multan, who is a professional of tall order, Dr. Ghulam Muhammad Gill, Director Small Holder & Dairy Development, Gujranwala, Dr. Abdul
Rauf, Director PVTV, Rawalpindi, Dr. Naveed Niazi, Dr. Iqbal Shahid, Deputy Secretary L&DD, Mr. Khalid Chaudhry, Deputy Secretary Planning, Dr. Nawaz Malik, Deputy Director Disease
Surveillance for his contribution in the first ever profiling of economic losses of diseases of all the districts in the Punjab, Dr. Abdul Rehman, Director PRI, Rawalpindi, Dr. Iqbal, Principal Livestock Training Institute, Sheikhupura, Dr. Yasir, Research Office, Mr. Shahid, from Directorate of
Livestock Farms, Dr. Abdul Saeed, Dr. Muhammad Atif, PRI, Mr. Muhammad Sharif, Mr. Muhammad Anwer, VAs, Sheep & Goat, Cholistan, Rao Iftilhar Ahmed, VA Donga Bonga, and lot
many whose names are left from mentioning here only due to dearth of space as their contribution is no less than others in value and magnitude.
Special thanks are due to Dr. Usman Tahir, Assistant Chief P&E and Dr. Muhammad Ikram, Planning Officer, P&E, both being epitomes of professional dedication, commitment, sincerity,
vision and inbuilt capabilities, who contributed a lot towards the institutional input in the formulation of the policy. Acknowledgement is far from completion without mentioning shining
stars of SPMS team of Lⅅ Dr. Azhar, Dr. Qayum, working under Dr. Qaseem’s dedicated leadership who produced wonderful results.
Last but not least my special appreciation is due to Mr. Muhammad Irfan Khalid, my Deputy Secretary, who conceived the novel idea of Virtual Governance and transformed it into a successful
working business model; he authored the policy and kept working with me in odd hours and on holidays for timely completion of the task.
Shortcomings, which may be many in any undertaking of this proportion, remain mine.
Naseem Sadiq
Secretary
PREFACE
Punjab is the largest province, population wise (both human and animal), of Pakistan. It is the
biggest contributor to the national GDP. Its share in Pakistan's GDP was 59% in 2014. It is especially dominant in the Services & Agriculture sectors of the economy. It has a vibrant private
sector, and poised much to gain from meaningful reforms, which increase efficiencies in business processes, allowing the government to concentrate on regulation and facilitation to benefit the stakeholders involved with the livestock and dairy industry.
In the pre 18th Constitutional Amendment period, there was not possible clearly articulated policy
framework for the provinces regarding livestock. The situation had already got deteriorated in the wake of devolution of power from provincial to local governments without consulting the stakeholders at the local level. Livestock was one of the affectees.
Historically, the private sector was restricted from entering areas of business dominated by government, with limited incentive to develop markets, create demand, and increase economic
activity. The consequences are distortion of market forces and inefficient business processes. Eighty percent of small holders, who constitute 90 % of the breeders, are landless. They need to be at the
heart of any policy to exploit the livestock potential in the short term. The time has come to take the challenge from the front and convert it into an opportunity.
The Livestock and Diary Development Department has been tasked to initiate next generation reforms that would bring the much awaited benefits of a functional democracy to the public by
translating the popular will into tangible and measurable reality. The bottom line of reforms is to transform the livestock and dairy sectors into competitive and productive sectors of economy for ensuring the food security and bringing prosperity to the stakeholders while generating exportable
surpluses. South, particularly Multan, Bahawalpur and Cholistan area have been targeted to produce organic meat; DG Khan Division, particularly the Tribal areas of DG Khan and Rajanpur has been
focused for the first time for boosting local economy by producing organic meat through small ruminants. Central Punjab will be converted into production house of silage and hay for local and foreign markets besides becoming production house of milch animals. Northern Punjab will be the
focus for production of small ruminants and rural poultry aiming at foreign markets.
It has been decided to harness the prowess of local breeds by unleashing the genetic potential and re-
defining the benchmarks that led to certain un-economic decisions by the farmers with undesirable fallout. Camel is focused for meat, particularly veal production and milk products. The thrust of
reforms is on the indigenous capacity building by using local strengths and wisdom. Modern processing technologies for small to medium players of the supply chain will shift the value gain up to the primary producer i.e. the subsistence level farmer. The Government will focus on the disease
prevention along with associated protocols of vaccination, deworming and disease surveillance. The crux of approach is to prevent disease from occurring so that no need of cure is left. Rationalization
of resources will be accordingly ensured. Areas of priority of HRD in the domain of livestock and dairy have been declared, which is a new shift towards forward planning. Relentless efforts have always been made for curbing the menace of middleman, who historically used to be an undesirable
reality. Although the spread of very phenomenon has been arrested yet much is needed to eliminate the specter altogether but in a phased manner. For the first time, a unique response has been
proposed for competing the middleman phenomenon in the market through institutional response of designing and offering financial products flexible and competitive enough to help provide productive capital to the farmers. The roles of PAMCO and PLDDB are being re-defined in the same context.
PAMCO will focus on the capacity building of small to medium processing informal enterprise with associated capacity building of existing processing systems and HR by introducing technologies in
small to medium processing and packaging. The PLDDB will concentrate on the designing and facilitation of provision of productive financial products for the farmers with the help of lending
institutes. Both have been retracted from the research on primary production systems for which L&DD’s research paraphernalia is enough besides dedicated universities like UVAS and UAF. A Livestock University in Bahawalpur will be a giant step towards sustainable development of the
Southern Punjab in tandem with other policy interventions for the area.
Rural women, students, Imam Masajid and Lambardars, being the opinion makers at the village level, have been envisaged in the role of livestock social activists to ameliorate the conditions of their environment, to channelize their energies for the economic uplift of their neighbourhood
through education, training and awareness. Livestock Nomadic clans have been addressed for the first time by any government.
Extension services are being boosted with provision of 4580 medical/ A.I./ disease diagnostic/ vaccination kit mounted motor cycles connected with the farmers through 9211 system for timely
provision of services. They will be deployed along over 500 defunct Octroi posts in the Punjab, which has been decided to be handed over to L&DD department for using them as relay centers of their services on the rural landscape.
Administrative dynamics are being boldly changed. Newly introduced Virtual Governance System is
in line with Government’s inherent desires and efforts to make quality service delivery round the clock available. If fully implemented, it has the potential to transform the sector and the mindset of its stakeholders. Real time performance monitoring through the very system has enabled the
Government to incentivize the performance of HR. A comprehensive regime of performance based incentives has been envisaged, which will boost the quality and quantity of service delivery to the
delight of the public.
For the first time in Lahore, quality assurance system regarding quality of fresh meat has been
deployed through 9211 platform of virtual governance. The same has put the control in public’s hands to check the veracity of quality claim of fresh meat at sale. Strict crackdown on unwholesome meat’s trade has started gaining the public confidence. The same will be replicated in the rest of the
province. The Government has decided to revive the country medicine’s regime and to create stringent quality control regime for quality assurance of animals and birds’ food items. The concept
of one health and control of zoonotic disease has been introduced for the first time. Approval has already been granted for creation of a Zoonotic Diseases Research Institute. Comprehensive disaster management protocols have been devised for the Livestock in the Punjab.
Skill development, education, training, and capacity building of HR and primary, secondary and
tertiary systems of production, supply chain, finance, and marketing of livestock and dairy sectors are the hall mark of first ever Livestock Policy of the Punjab.
Market led growth of the sector has been envisaged by keeping the government away from creating distortions in the marketing and value formation channels and concentrating on facilitation of the
markets and stabilization of the business environment. Similar unfair practices by the private sector to distort fair market competition shall also be checked in the same spirit in the context of ensuring food security and prosperity of stakeholders, particularly small farmer. The policy aims at
contributing visible push in the GDP in coming years.
Executive Summary
The Agriculture Sector contributes 21 % of GDP of Pakistan, which consumes 46% of direct labour
force, coming from 67 % of population. Out of Agriculture, the share of Livestock sector is 56 %.
However, the head count involved in both sectors is same as livestock and agriculture supplement
each other in the rural landscape. The semi-arid and arid climatic conditions of the country coupled
with shrinking water resources due to varied reasons have severely undermined the future prospects
of crops, if practiced on the prevalent model. Livestock is thus the only rescuer in this backdrop,
which has the tremendous potential to climb the ladder of value addition as well.
The resource base highlights the existing strengths of the Punjab and its potential regarding the
livestock & dairy sectors. The non-existence of Provincial Livestock Policy was due to some
Constitutional and functional aspects of the body politic. The ambiance has now changed and dice is
casted in favour of public policy formulation to lend structure to the will of the people through
institutional mechanics- hall mark of functional democracy.
The existing practice on the livestock canvass is predominance of the public sector with little room
for the fair market competition and resultant growth. The same role has been unwittingly replicated
by some private players, further adding to the unfair market practices at the peril of healthy market
growth and prosperity to the farmer. Within the public sector, major chunk of resources are being
consumed by those having little contribution towards private sector led growth like the poultry,
which grew by itself without having much R&D inputs from the public organizations.
Major challenges are the nascent public policy framework; the misdirected governance framework
with focus on the curative side, the knowledge framework that has little output on the basis of logic,
reasoning and local wisdom. Marketing framework is but collection of unfair market practices. The
financial framework is starvation by default, having little to do with marketing aspect of financial
products and plagued with middleman phenomenon. The production framework is replete with low
productivity, anachronic benchmarking, shortage of feed, fodder, nutrients, minerals and clean
drinking water to the animals. Then the missing link of beef production and hostile landscape for
dairy production further complicated the situation.
Lack of disease surveillance, documentation of interventions and non-availability of critically
important vaccines are all progeny of the prevailing doctrine of livestock sector governance with
increased desire of letting the livestock fell ill for getting it treated. It is not surprising that no
mapping of district wise economic losses of diseases had ever been undertaken. Similarly the
breeding framework is replete with confusion resulting genetic upheaval and untenable practices of
SPUs. The research frame work is but going totally indifferent and irrelevant of what it ought to
have been. The Extension is but limited in concept to the treatment only.
Due to pre 18th Amendment public policy vacuum at provincial level, in the absence of any clear
direction and vision regarding livestock besides unsuccessful efforts of interlocking of foreign
models left only one sector growing rudderlessly i.e. HR pool of higher educated livestock
professionals, who in the absence of matching growth in the sector, evolved their own industry of
providing treatment to the ailing animals. Hence, disease is part of the business model in a void of
Veterinarians as livestock asset managers rather livestock disease attendants. Elimination of animal
husbandry subject 13 years ago from the disciplines is a testimony to that fact. It further alludes
towards this reality that enterprise always remain there. Its channelization is required to harness and
transform it into prosperity of all stakeholders.
Hence, the government has decided to make L&DD Department the livestock asset manager of the
province with associated re-alignments, re-defining and reorientations. The development framework
has in its core the sustainability and enabling infrastructure for attaining the optimal potential of
livestock and dairy sectors. A complete paradigm shift from curative to preventive side of the
livestock sector governance has been initiated. It will ensure food security through competitiveness
resulting in the prosperity of stakeholders with generation of exportable surpluses. The concept of
private sector led growth has been enlarged to market led growth. By redefining the concept the
unfair market practices by some of the private sector players at the peril of poor farmer will not be
allowed. However, the approach is to evolve the competing institutional response which is
competitive in the market to knock out any deterrent to the fair market growth. The government is
retiring itself from monopolizing the market growth. It will be the facilitator and stabilizer of
business environment.
A Policy Communication Framework has been defined, which is also a first in the realm of public
policy. The policy has been described along with complete lifecycle to help measure its
performance parameters.
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
The Agriculture Sector contributes 21% of GDP of Pakistan, which consumes 46% of direct labour
force, coming from 67% of population. Out of Agriculture, the share of livestock sector is 56%. However, the head count involved in both sectors is same as livestock and agriculture supplement each other in the rural landscape. Livestock’s value exceeds the combined value of all the major and
minor crops by about 6.1%. The share of livestock products in the generation of foreign exchange is about 13%. More significantly, livestock is an integral part (30-40%) of livelihood of about 30 to 35
million rural farmers. Presently, the reported gross value addition of livestock stands at PKR 1,172 billion, whereas livestock share in export is 8.5%.
Pakistan is leading FAO statistics of livestock with 2nd position in buffalo population of the world. Moreover Pakistan reportedly ranks 4th in total livestock population, 4th in goat population and 12th in cattle-milk production. During 2013-14 agriculture sector grew by 2.1%; interestingly much of
this growth was contributed by livestock sector, which reportedly grew by 2.9% during the same period.
The semi-arid and arid climatic conditions of the country coupled with shrinking water resources due to varied reasons have severely undermined the future prospects of crops, if practiced on the
prevalent model. Livestock is thus the only rescuer in this backdrop, which has the tremendous potential to climb the ladder of value addition as well. Further this is the only sector which can arrest
the unchecked urbanization by creating decent employment opportunities in the rural areas.
1.1. THE RESOURCE BASE
Punjab is the largest province, population wise (both human and animal), of Pakistan. It is
second largest province in terms of land area measuring 205,344 Sq. Km and is located at the North Western edge of the geologic Indian plate in South Asia. The province is bordered by Kashmir to the North-East, the Indian States of Punjab and Rajasthan to the East, the
province of Sindh to the South, the province of Balochistan to the Southwest, the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to the West, and the Islamabad Capital Territory to the North. The
province is mainly a fertile region along the river valleys, while sparse deserts can be found near the border with Rajasthan and the Sulaiman Range. The region contains the Thal and Cholistan deserts. The Indus River and its many tributaries traverse the Punjab from North to
South.
The landscape is amongst the most heavily irrigated in the world through a well elaborated infrastructure canals. Weather extremes are notable from the hot and barren South to the cool hills of the North. The foothills of the Himalayas are found in the extreme North. Most areas
in Punjab experience extreme weather with foggy winters, often accompanied by rain. By mid-February the temperature begins to rise; springtime weather continues until mid-April,
when the summer heat sets in.
The onset of the Southwest Monsoon reaches Punjab by July. The spring Monsoon has either
skips over the area or causes it to rain so hard that floods result. June and July are oppressively hot. The temperature reaches 51°C in some extreme cases.
In August, there comes the rainy season, subsiding the hardest part of the summer but cooler
weather does not come until late October. In the Punjab the temperate ranges from −2 °C to 45 °C, but can reach 47 °C in summer and can touch down to −5°C in winter.
Punjab is the biggest contributor to the national GDP. The province's economy has quadrupled since 1972. Its share of Pakistan's GDP was 54.7% in 2000 and 59% in 2014. It
is especially dominant in the Services & Agriculture sectors of the Pakistan Economy. With its contribution ranging from 52.1% to 64.5% in the Services Sector and 56.1% to 61.5% in
the Agriculture Sector. It is also major manpower contributor because it has largest pool of professionals and highly skilled manpower in Pakistan.
As per 2006 Census, the Punjab dominates the Pakistan’s livestock sector. The province has claimed to have 49% of Pakistan’s cattle, 65% of the buffaloes, 24% of the sheep, and 37%
of the goats. In value of product, it is reportedly producing 62% of milk, 43% of beef, 32% of mutton and 75 % of Poultry of Pakistan. However, livestock productivity and standards of preventive health are far below world benchmarks.
1.2. THE AMBIENCE AND NEED FOR THE PROVINCIAL LIVESTOCK
POLICY
Punjab has a vibrant private sector, and is poised much to gain from meaningful reforms, which increase efficiencies in business processes, allowing the government to concentrate on regulation and facilitation to benefit the stakeholders involved with the livestock industry.
Traditionally the main transaction in the livestock sector is in the form of live animals. Out of the reported annual trade of 20 million animals, 7.8 million animals valuing Rs. 200 billion are traded on Eid-ul-Izha within a squeezed time span of just two weeks. Against the claimed
production, the local carpet and leather industry had to import wool and hides worth billions as per their verbal discourse. The import of dumped, near expiry dry milk and new
phenomenal import/ smuggling of whey powder with its “known industrial uses” is no more a secret and as it has degenerated to “retail level” by informal actors.
In the dairy industry wastage against the reported 20% is on the much higher side due to poor infrastructure facilities. The highest ever investment made in this sector in in the form of
corporate/ commercial farms four years ago has almost 70% evaporated in the form of disinvestment. The deserted structures of such farms are indicative of the misconceptions while making the feasibility of investment. Even in public sector, huge investments pumped
into the value addition of the sector were siphoned out into the drain. It all happened because of the distorted markets, coordination disjoints and policy vacuum. Idara-e-Kisan is one of
the examples of the brutality and butchery purported with this sector and the stakeholders. Promotion of beef as a distinct product has never been attended as it always remained a by-
product of what is left-over of a milch animal. The same is the case with mutton, thanks to the price capping, which has worked as a “shock” to the breeder, who is none else but a
subsistence farmer. This single phenomenon can be held responsible for not allowing a single sheep/ goat commercial farm to evolve in the whole of country let alone the Punjab. Does this situation allow us the grading as per age/ weight of animals or cover quarantine issues
while moving towards fattening or breed improvement?
So is the claimed quantum of milk production. The correlation between the input cost and
output value has never been calculated for which the farmer may be held responsible. Perhaps he is forced by the conventional forces and informal set up with full dominance of
middleman to accept whatever he is paid. The conventional model heavily hides the cost of production pertaining to service and labour. The very phenomenon has even started expressing itself at the level of corporate farming. Plethora of consultants has burnt midnight
oil to fetch the wisdom but fate of poor breeder is too stubborn to move; interlocking of anachronic “exotic” systems could not meet the desired expectations. The need is to put the
governance at the back burner and bring the public service at forefront of mind and behaviour by giving a heavy tilt in favour of the poor breeder, including the “corporate subsistence farmer”, in the first phase as a confidence building measure.
The diversity of above mentioned challenges and their inherent links with each other; their
socio-economic repercussions, the untapped potential of livestock in the Punjab, coupled with the decision of the Punjab Government to put the Punjab as a vibrant player on the livestock map of the world, bringing desired economic prosperity to its millions of
population has induced the first Livestock Policy of the Punjab. In the pre 18 th Constitutional Amendment period, there was not possible clearly articulated policy framework for the
provinces regarding livestock. The situation had already got deteriorated in the wake of devolution of power from provincial to local government without consulting the stakeholders at the local level. The same was done in isolation at the Federal level. Livestock was one of
the affectees, with the consequence that issues such as cattle markets, slaughterhouses and meat markets were badly distorted.
In the post 18th Amendment scenario, much needed breathing space has been created. Areas like drugs and medicines registration and regulation, veterinary profession registration and
existing Federal laws and institutions pertaining to similar issues have to be replaced with more vibrant provincial ones. Historically, the private sector was restricted from entering
areas of business dominated by government, with limited incentive to develop markets, create demand, and increase economic activity. The consequences are distortion of market forces and inefficient business processes. In the livestock sector, although there is potential
for increased growth yet the non-existence of comprehensive policy contributed to reduced economic performance to a level which is unacceptable under the current conditions of
demand. Dairy productivity is only 22% of world benchmarks as animals are heavily underfed, unprotected from disease, with poor extension and husbandry services. Eighty percent of small holders, who constitute 90 % of the breeders, are landless. They need to be
at the heart of any policy to exploit the livestock potential in the short term. The time has come to take the challenge from the front and convert it into an unavoidable opportunity.
1.2.1. THE EXISTING PRACTICE
Presently, no comprehensive policy document exists that translates the constant desire of the government to set the private sector to attain its true growth potential with government being
a stabilizer of business environment and facilitator of business endeavors. There is vacuum in area of disease control, curative health standards, livestock medicine,
including country medicines, feed ingredients, and breeding practices etc. Expenditure
patterns reveal heavy tilt towards curative services. Following two diagrams depict the expenditure patterns of the L&DD for the years 2010-11 and 2014-15.
RCCSC Jhang 17.307, 1%
Extension Services (DGE) 73.479, 4%
Research Services (DGR) 8.845, 0%
P&E Cell 7.195, 0%
PD Labs 68.185, 4%
Vet Edu & Res . 60.508, 3%
Provincial Scheme
Research 58.758, 3% Vety. Hosp 0.100, 0%
Field Control & Disease (Ext) 14.975,
1%
Field Control &
Disease (Res) 9.439, 0%
Breeding Operation GF, LPRI 127.233, 7%
Breeding Operation DG (Ext) 301.813,
16%
Provincial Scheme Farms (Res) 4.321,
0%
Breeding Operation GF, DLF 231.026,
12% Provincial Scheme (Ext) 15.006, 1%
Transfer to Dist. for Treatment of
Livestock 500, 26%
Provincial Scheme Dir B.I 94.899, 5%
UVAS, 94.263, 5%
Director SRM, Multan 124.402,
6% PRI, 134.222,
7%
Budgetary Allocations 2010-11
Budgetary allocations indicate heavy investment on the following:
17.307 127.233
4.321
231.026
94.899
776.599
48.67
351.511
7.14
560.066
163.579
1820.202
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
2000
Directorate of
RCCSC
Jhang
Breeding
Operation
Govt. Farms
LPRI (Res)
Provincial
Scheme-
Farm
(Research)
Breeding
Operation
Govt. Farms
(DLF)
Provincial
Scheme-
Director B.I.
Total
2010-11
2014-15
Budgetary Allocations 2014-15
THE OUTCOME
The public sector claims artificial insemination (A.I.) of 1.8 million animals and the private sector 2.3 million animals in the year 2013-14. Using the modest yardstick of at least 50 %
conception rate, 2.1 million animals of better breed should have been produced by now. The reality seems to be transcendental in nature, which mundane calculation systems have failed to demonstrate!
Chapter 2
MAJOR CHALLENGES
2.1. THE PUBLIC POLICY FRAMEWORK
The biggest challenge and also the argument regarding Constitutional democracy in Pakistan has been the failure - perceived or otherwise, of the government of the day to translate the
popular will into tangible reality. Government of the Punjab has gone a long way to decipher the structural anomalies in the governance architecture. The root cause is the over-arching public sector with top-down mind set. No competition and no need to excel in the
performance have rendered a pool of HR that cannot fathom the depth and pace of change being encountered across the traditional barriers and boundaries in the present day world.
The fulcrum of control is heavily tilted in favour of the public at large. Sticking to old guns is no more an option. The advent of information age and knowledge economy has accentuated the role of knowledge worker. The critical evaluation of any organization’s performance
should be thus a continuous process. The definition of control is no more to monopolize a given landscape but to introduce corrective measures well in time to save the cost of delayed
decisions. The historical absence of maturing a popular desire from across the grass-root level and its reflection and expression in the governance actions have pushed the governments, heavily leaned towards the omni-present bureaucratic channels, to obtain
public policy inputs with associated limitations.
Luckily, the 18th Constitutional Amendment has given opportunities to the federating units to exercise independence in an overarching bureaucratic federal setup. There is no short cut for the time taken by systems to gain maturity and evolve. However, the first Livestock Policy of
province of the Punjab is a first step towards that direction. Efforts have been made to enlist and take care of the interest of the producer of livestock on the rural landscape of the Punjab, whose interest could never find its due place before, owing to varied reasons. The scale and
pace of change in the livestock sector and the impact it can generate is evidenced from the reception of poor breeders and rural masses witnessed in the wake of interventions, the
Punjab Government made to offset the flood disasters and in the recent mass vaccination campaign. This policy aims at to put the Punjab on the livestock radar of the world.
A public policy framework that takes care of all aspects of livestock sector development and ensures the intended transition is the biggest challenge, particularly keeping in view the
existence of undesirable forces working to safeguard their parochial interests.
2.2. THE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK
There are two components of livestock sector governance, like any other health sector
management:
3. Preventive Regime, having following intrinsic components:-
a. Vaccination (and deworming etc.) b. Reproduction c. Fattening
d. Milking e. Skins & hides
4. Curative Regime, comprising of:- a. Invasive procedures (surgery etc.)
b. Non-invasive (antibiotics etc.)
The preventive regime needs a distinct infrastructure both physical and operational, which may be approached through pro-active and dynamic outreach activities in the field,
technically called extension services. On the other hand, the curative side is catered to through its static infrastructure of hospitals, dispensaries and medical centers etc. Since
animals, unlike humans, do not have socio-economic value in the old age, they are rarely allowed to attain the age beyond their reproductive age. The actual productivity directly comes from the quality management of intrinsic components of the preventive regime of
livestock sector governance for which the 180 degree paradigm shift is required in the operational dynamics and positioning of the L&DD.
2.3. THE KNOWLEDGE FRAMEWORK
In the absence of fairly competing markets, knowledge generation is also retarded. There is neither focus nor availability of applied knowledge in the field of livestock production and
disease prevention. The misdirected resource allocation has resulted in a situation where only supply of treatment-side-professionals is available to some extent. The absence of practical exposure to veterinary graduates has restricted the growth of clinical expertise. The element
of application of knowledge is also missing. The research is for the sake of obtaining better pay scales and not for the enhancement of productivity of the system and the production with little applicability to the requirements of real life challenges.
The care of animals, which a general prudence would demand, like provision of clean
drinking water, protection from extreme weather, observance of breeding seasons, realization about the harms of inbreeding, awareness about the mineral deficiencies in the fodder and drinking water and subsequent use of supplements etc. is but fast disappearing due to
knowledge gaps and resultant misconceptions amongst the breeders and practitioners of livestock. The forgotten recipe of country medicines with ease of use and akin to animals’
needs of a given eco-system requires revival.
2.3.1. CALIBRATING THE OPTIONS The Punjab Government has calibrated its priority on protecting public interests and rights
with minimal interference with a well-competing private sector. The Government intends to put the private sector in the driving seat for unleashing the enterprising and entrepreneurship.
However, the facilitation regime would be so erected to ensure that public good is fully taken care of through inbuilt accountability mechanism with clearly defined lines of responsibilities.
The summarized policy framework would be as under:
1. Addressing the market distortions by adopting regional and customized approach with focus on demand driven market mechanism, with producer having direct
share in the value gain across the value chain.
2. Increasing awareness amongst the end users that there is a cost for goods and services, if sustainability of the supplies is required.
3. Formation of associations of subsistence farmers at district and regional level for information and experience sharing and for creating their institutional input in
aligning the policy goals. Blending of their wisdom and experience to attain optimal potential of the regional breeds. It must include a mechanism of mapping of genetic resources and its propagation.
4. Investment in socio-economic uplift of subsistence producer, through education, exposure and training, as a corner stone of livestock sector capacity building
while incorporating cultural ethos in viable business models. 5. Village is to be made the basic reference and demonstrable business model of best
practices by exploiting the established but under-utilized institutions of
Lambardars, Imam Masjid, Chowkidars and the students. 6. For regaining the trust of the poor breeder; for excluding the mighty middleman
and to liberate the breeder from the fear of disease and extortion, Eco-Markets mechanism will be introduced.
2.4. THE MARKETING FRAMEWORK
The prevailing marketing systems have resulted in sub-optimal performance of the sector. There is little value addition in the livestock value chains characterized by lack of grading of
livestock and livestock products, low awareness about fattening of animals to improve quality prior to marketing, inadequate infrastructure for processing and poor handling of
livestock products, etc. Moreover, processing costs are high, and farmers generally have inadequate knowledge, facilities and skills for small scale processing. The challenge is to improve value addition in the livestock value chains at affordable cost and at a scale suitable
for rural communities.
Livestock and livestock products marketing and trade face several constraints and challenges including:
Poor market infrastructure for livestock and livestock products;
Poor and costly transportation system for livestock and livestock products;
Poor or little knowledge (inadequate information) of the markets (domestic and export) for livestock and livestock products;
Non-existent livestock producers organizations, eliminating the bargaining power of farmers and no economies of scale in marketing of livestock and livestock products,
leading to high transaction costs, wastage and inefficiencies;
Weak linkages or coordination among actors in the livestock value chains;
Inadequate incentivization and business skills especially among smallholder resource-poor livestock producers;
Non-compliance with international quality standards.
2.4.1. THE CATTLE MARKETS
The evolved dynamics of each cattle market in Punjab needs to be studied as a special case to understand and evaluate the deployed tactics/ techniques. Basically the site selected for the
purpose was on the basis of the convenience of the organizers and not that of the breeder. An in-depth study of each cattle mandi would reveal the following:
1. Monopoly of one or two groups over the whole management and trade, for which
collaboration of certain investors and patronization at the local level has to be arranged. 2. Informal financing mechanism by advance of credit supply, where actual monetary
transactions are designed to separate value from the cost, with value taken away by the
financer and cost left with the producer, including the service cost of money, mark up and subsidized cost of production in the conventional model practiced by the
subsistence farmer. It means the farmer is losing the value of produce, the value of time spent and efforts made with double jeopardy of opportunity cost and cost of production he has to bear due to prevalent system.
3. No cattle can be sold without reference for which the breeder had to pay a specific amount to the group of influential working through proxies. Any endeavour to direct
sale is intercepted by introducing fake owners by stigmatizing the animals “as stolen” 4. Investors in each mandi use their tentacles to ensure that “No Purchase” happens just to
crash the market, forcing the breeder to induce panic sale as the cost of transporting
back the animals is staggeringly high for the latter. The produce is then liquidated at a time of choice to extract double profit by forward maneuvering.
5. The seller and the purchaser well understand per head cost of transportation of each cattle, with additional enroute cost of paying “bhatta” at each check post.
6. The animal both slaughtering and the miltch brought to the markets are from different
areas for which no guarantee as to their health and other related information can be provided. For milch animals, there are 5-6 main cattle markets, from where the animal
is taken to different parts of the country and beyond. The routine practice is that the animal is not milked up to 18 hours till its sale. Major transactions take place in the afternoon with the customary practice of demonstration of its milking in the purchaser’s
presence. The newly born calf is used just for milk let down and intake of the toxic milk which was retained in the udder of the animal to show off its milking prowess.
Traditionally the calf is weaned off, sold with the ultimate fate that either it is immediately slaughtered or dies of diarrhea. Hence, incalculable loss of the produce, the reproduction potential and the breeding system.
7. Actual transactions between sellers and buyers are conducted as a secret process, so that price transparency is not possible.
Under the situation and given the level of extortions in the markets, the Punjab government has envisaged a relief package to address the menace.
2.4.2. THE MEAT AND DAIRY MARKETS Dairy sector in Pakistan consists of three types of producers; 80% small farmers raising more
than 50% of total milk animals (herd size less than 5 animals), 14% medium-sized farmers/ producers, raising 29% milk animals (herd size 5-10 animals), 3% large-scale producers
sharing 21% of milk animals (herd size less than10 animals). Animals are raised in agricultural lands and almost 1/5th of this land is used as pasture land to raise animals including milk-producing animals. Medium and large size producers are mostly located in
peri-urban areas having better farm-to-market access.
The fragmented structure of supply chain of milk pose serious problem, with high collection
costs due to dispersed supply sources, poor supply chain infrastructure and absence of cold chain resulting in substantial losses and poor quality of milk, adulteration by middlemen and
others. Lack of dairy supply chain results in high losses up to 15% especially in summer. The geographical dispersion of the large number of smallholders in the dairy sector and use of conventional transportation, inappropriate storage and inefficient calving practices results
into wastage of almost one-fifth of the milk collected.
During 2013-14, milk production claimed to have increased by 3.2% and meat 4.5% as compared to corresponding period last year. According to United States Department of Agriculture statistics, Pakistan ranks 9th among top beef producing and consuming countries
and also ranks 9th amongst sheep producing countries. Pakistan exported 58,730 metric tons of meat and meat preparations during 2013-14 (July-March). The export of meat and meat
preparations fetched US$ 177.5 million. During same period export facilitation was also provided for livestock by-products like animal casing, bones, horns and hooves, gelatin that fetched US$ 50.0 million.
For the last four years, the business model of the dairy farmer has totally been disturbed as
some of the packing industry started preferring use of imported dry milk; which encouraged the mafia to introduce the synthetic milk with whey powder as its main ingredient. The situation directly affected the demand and ultimately the feasibility of keeping dairy animals
has totally been disturbed. It has almost reversed the investment trends of the past three years in the dairy industry for corporate farms. On the other hand the small dairy farmers who are
90 % in number out of which 80 % are landless and their subsistence has been put at stake. This upheaval has directly affected the use of concentrates and supplements due to which the reproductivity has sharply declined. The ever-growing panic sale of animals, increased
percentage of slaughtering of female animals of reproductive age should be taken as an SOS call. This trend, if not arrested, can even endanger the existence of the local species and
supply of the dairy products to the local population, endangering the food security. This situation poses a big question mark about the exportable surplus and the ranking of the country with reference to the animal population/ milk production claims.
2.5. THE FINANCIAL FRAMEWORK
2.5.1. THE SHARE OF LIVESTOCK IN AGRI LOANS’ CONSUMPTION
Bank loans to the agriculture sector have been on the rise for some years. In FY 13-14,
banks exceeded their indicative agricultural lending target in Punjab. However, a fraction of the said lending i.e. just 7% could find its way in livestock sector despite the fact that livestock sector constitutes 56% of agriculture sector in terms of GDP.
Bank loans to the agriculture sector have been on the rise for some years. In FY13-14,
banks exceeded their indicative agricultural lending target in Punjab. Banks’ lending to Punjab’s agriculture sector totaled Rs. 293.3 billion in 2013 and Rs. 339.1billion in FY14, against the target of Rs. 246 billion and Rs. 294.7 billion, respectively. This resulted in
overall higher-than-targeted agricultural lending of Rs. 336.2 billion in FY13 and Rs.
391.4 billon in FY14 for the whole country. A careful study is required to understand the financial architecture in vogue in the field.
2.5.2 THE PHENOMENON OF MIDDLEMAN
Historically, the middleman used to be a dagger stabbed in the heart of the agriculture sector. The government has done a lot on priority basis to curb the menace of the
middleman. However, control is primarily adorned with relentless administrative actions, personally and painstakingly supervised at the highest executive level. Institutional
response is thus need of the hour to expose the middleman phenomenon to a matching competitive market response, generated by working public policy stimuli, the logical corollary of next generation reforms.
The success of middleman lies in his competitiveness and market distortions due to public sector’s role in blocking the competition in the markets. Wherever there is price capping
in the market, the market forces axiomatically shift the incidence on the primary producer. This is the rule of the game that must be understood. The middleman is competitive due to
the prowess of his vertical market linkages and the design of financial products he offers. Unlike banks, he does not lend money. He simply provides the credit line that operates in kind. The earning is the produce that translates into money strictly following the balancing
effect of demand and supply at a given time. And definitely, that given time is the time of middleman’s choice when market is facing glut due to good intentions of governments by
inducing price capping. In his financial offerings, the middleman provides inputs’ provision in kind to the farmer
as a credit line. He follows the principles of deferred payment while paying to the providers of inputs like seed, fertilizers, tilling etc. in the market and reduces the shelf-
occupancy of his offering by reducing the time of actual transaction operated out of the farmer’s credit line and availability (production) of the produce. This technique reduces the cost of his financial product and he easily makes the exorbitant profit, making him
more powerful on the landscape of this canvass. In comparison, state financial institutions and commercial banks are not keeping up to develop ingenious financial products to
compete this market as any seller would become in sellers’ market. It is pertinent to mention here that 73% of potential banking market does not have access to banking sector in Pakistan.
What is keeping the cauldron from exploding is the aggressive pumping of soft agri loans
that are being consumed without generating a commensurate produce, besides visible efforts of the government to protect public from naked actions of the middleman through administrative means. Hence, what once used to be the consumption of agri loans in the
marry making by the farmers, had relegated to meet their daily expenses. This may be where the extra billions had gone in addition to the allocated amount, as discussed in the
former paragraph. If there is some research or understanding of the very dynamics of middleman’s growth, the answer is no more than a silence. Even if that were not enough, the distortions and misconceptions did not allow the markets to gain the corrections,
which ought to have been a natural market phenomenon.
2.6. THE PRODUCTION FRAMEWORK
The production framework is replete with many issues that are keeping the livestock & dairy sectors away from attaining the desired level of growth and development as per the potential
and resource base that can be made available. The traditional role of supply of milch and beef animals to other provinces and some neighbouring countries requires augmentation of efforts to produce extra livestock. The increasing commercial use of wheat straw, other crop
residues and inputs used by livestock requires proactive policy with regard to the silage and hay making for which the potential of Punjab is still untapped.
Since Punjab is the only producer and supplier of milch animals nucleus of its prime miltch animals is being drained without proper replenishment plan. The past practice of refurbishing
of dry animals by bringing them back to their original habitat needs to be re-activated to fill this vacuum. The enterprising nature of some areas still have the capacity to offer that
facility. The keeping of miltch animals in peripheries of big cities, particularly that of Karachi, which are mainly victims of ruthless use of oxytocin could be overhauled and again put to production of milk and meat in planned way. The Pakistan Railways needs to be
approached for facilitation of transportation to such animals for shifting them back from Karachi for such rejuvenation purpose for which the Punjab Livestock Department can even
share the subsidized freight charges.
2.6.1. ECONOMIC MODEL VS. CONVENTIONAL MODEL
There are two prevalent models of livestock production in the Punjab. The economic model is the one, many call the corporate farming. The other one is the conventional model, where costs of inputs are heavily subsidized from inside the inner system of the farmer. While the
economic model has almost been knocked out of the market due to varied reasons, cost of production being the biggest, the conventional model, which primarily caters to the
subsistence farmer, is still struggling to survive but has inherent limitations for production multiplication.
2.6.2. LOW PRODUCTIVITY
Although Punjab is a major producer of livestock products, the average productivity of livestock is lower compared to world average. Inadequate availability of feed and fodder,
poor breeding practices, poor management and husbandry practices, high economic losses due to diseases, inadequate marketing and financial infrastructures, and unorganized marketing are the other major culprits for low productivity of livestock systems.
2.6.3. BENCHMARKING
Due to lack of benchmarking of local breeds and their produce with exotic breeds and their produce, it has become easily exploitable for parochial interests to hijack policy decisions by employing skewed interpretation in unit comparisons. For example
Nili- Ravi buffalo may produce more liters of milk in best circumstances with fat content of more than 6%. A Frisean cow producing more liters of milk but with half of the fat content
cannot have a comparison in terms of actual value of the produce. So the bench marking should be on the content baskets of a given animal’s produce with reference to the consumed
input, stamina to sustain weather and disease, reproductive lifespan.
2.6.4. SHORTAGE OF FEED, FODDER, MINERALS, NUTRIENTS &
CLEAN DRINKING WATER
The gap between the requirement and availability of feed and fodder for livestock is increasing primarily due to decreasing area under fodder cultivation and reduced availability
of crop residues as fodder. There is continuous shrinkage of common/ range lands leading to over-grazing in the remaining grasslands. It is imperative to arrange sufficient good quality feed and fodder for efficient utilization of genetic potential of the various livestock species
and for sustainable improvement in productivity. This factor can be gauged from the fact that irrespective of the genetic potential, underfed cattle can hardly give higher yield. The
National Commission on Agriculture (NCA) 1988 suggested that "if all animals in milk receive full diet which meets their daily appetite without changing the feed mix i.e. maintaining the present poor nutritional requirement balance, this alone could increase milk
yield by 100 per cent" . The nutritional value is to be enhanced by supplementing the required nutrients/ minerals for which mapping is required. The importance of clean drinking water,
its availability and awareness amongst farmers is pathetically lacking. Hence, little training and support to livestock workers on nutritional aspects of livestock care can bring about amazing results.
2.6.5. THE MISSING LINK OF FEEDLOT FATTENING Meat as a distinct product has never been developed in Pakistan. The only focus has been
that of the milch animals. Meat is thus a by-product of the miltch animal, which has been retired from milk production spectrum of life. It is, therefore, not surprising that feedlot
fattening has never been taken seriously except for rearing sacrificial animals for Eid Markets. This is tantamount of closing the doors to high end meat markets.
2.6.6. THE PROCESSING – THE HOSTILE LANDSCAPE
The poor capacity of processing facilities related to various livestock products has culminated into huge wastages in the system of supply chain. With fraction of the cost of
perished commodities, requisite capacity to process and pack the produce can be made available by an enabling infrastructure on Use, Earn & Pay (UEP) basis.
2.6.7. THE DYNAMICS OF MEAT
The cost of meat is not commensurate with the cost of production. Beef is more costly in production than mutton but market is willing to pay more for the mutton than the beef. Beef
in turn is not prepared rather it is a leftover of a retiring milch animal. If that is not enough price capping and treatment meted out to the farmer further retards the growth of production
systems. Overwhelming majority of animals are used in a time span of two days at Eid. In the
absence of processing industry other restrictions, huge volume of some by-products go in wastage which otherwise could fetch billions of rupees.
2.6.8. THE COMMERCIAL POULTRY The commercial poultry has not attained its true potential. Day old chicks (DOCs) of
grandparent flocks (GPs) are being imported, which is a question mark from the point of view of food security and sustainability, besides incurring added cost to the production.
2.6.9. LACK OF DISEASE SURVEILLANCE INFRASTRUCTURE AND
FORECASTING
Although some infrastructure exists for the disease testing but in the absence of a viable and robust surveillance infrastructure, the disease forecasting would not be possible. There is a
need to establish effective and integrated surveillance, vigilance, prevention and control mechanisms designed to protect the productivity and safety of all animals and an efficient forecasting and management information system on occurrence of diseases, particularly of
epidemic and endemic nature. Prompt collection and validation of animal disease information and creation of database would help in launching of various disease control programmes.
This system would also help in meeting the international obligation of notification of certain diseases and will have direct impact on the fate of export to high end markets.
2.6.10. LACK OF DOCUMENTATION OF INTERVENTIONS There is neither any protocols available nor need was ever felt due to parasitic approach in the management of livestock sector. The sector had traditionally been subservient to policies
of the Federal Government with scant space for the Provincial Government to adapt to the market needs or changes in the demand of development of the sector. The wastage of
resources was of such a high proportion that documentation was deliberately avoided to minimize the track of interventions to escape accountability. The provincial government has decided to reverse this practice. Without accountability, there will not come productivity
and for making the actions subservient to different accountability regimes, including social accountability the need is to ensure the documentation of government interventions and
make them widely available through some digital accountability mechanism.
2.6.11. SHORTAGE OF VACCINES
The area of vaccine production could not take off due to overwhelming focus on curative side of health management. This practice has culminated into huge economic losses, which if calculated would offset the cost of several vaccine production facilities in the country.
Nonetheless, the shortage of vaccine is a major impediment to move towards eliminating the preventable diseases; to minimize the economic losses of diseases and to gain access to
high end export markets.
2.6.12. QUALITY ASSURANCE AND REGISTRATION
The absence of quality assurance and registration apparatus of medicines and other products for the livestock sector has hampered the growth of a vibrant industry as there is
legislative void after the passage of 18th Amendment.
2.6.13. DISEASE DIAGNOSTICS
Disease diagnostics is the area having far reaching impact if working properly as per the requirements of the farmers and the market. Unfortunately, due to absence of a livestock
policy, directionless efforts did not produce intended results, leaving the deficiency of information regarding disease prevalence patterns, compromising the ability of strategic decision makers to take corrective measures well in time. It multiplied the curative cost to
the breeder as well.
2.6.14. ECONOMIC LOSS OF DISEASES
The economic losses of preventable diseases are in billions of rupees. FMD alone causes
losses to the tune of Rs. 8 billion a year. Mastitis reduces the milk productivity of animals up to 50 % with irreparable economic shock to the farmer. Losses from Hypo-dermosis,
PPR and BQ are billions. Then comes the ND. Every estimate shall be less than the actual colossal losses caused by tap worms/ Ecto-parasites. There is no dearth to the list of diseases that can be prevented with fraction of a cost, which otherwise grows staggeringly
high in the aftermath of outbreak. A survey in the wake of recent mass vaccination campaign, through which samples of blood, faecal and milk collected from each street of a
village revealed the economic losses being born by the poor farmer of each district are as under:
2.6.15. THE BREEDING FRAMEWORKS
The breeding services despite consuming major chunk of the budget did not produce desired results. Rather they added to the distrust of the farmers due to off the mark
outcomes. The reasons are many, chiefly being the absence of a direction and linkage of breeding activities and goals with holistic development of the livestock sector.
2.6.15.1. THE GENETIC UPHEAVAL
The reckless introduction of exotic breeds and heavy inbreeding amongst local breeds have culminated into a genetic upheaval of biblical proportions.
2.6.15.2. THE SEMEN PRODUCTION UNITS
The Semen production units are in the public as well as in the private sector. Due to absence of any accountability mechanism and traceability, most of them have become
hubs of rudderless activities with devastating repercussions for the breed and the breeder.
2.6.15.3. THE ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION
It is that unfortunate domain that has been subject of unchecked growth of unregulated activities with free license of playing with health of animals without fear of
accountability. The results are devastating for what has been purported not only with the animals but with the breeders. The economic losses of A.I. done by ill-trained A.I. technicians can never fully depict the agony and misery of the animal and the farmer.
2.6.16. THE RESEARCH FRAMEWORK
There are state of the art laboratories with equipment, chemicals, kits and trained HR from best institutions of the world but they could not contribute to the sector as per their capabilities. Further, the demand based applied research could not be promoted for
certain reasons. The Government has decided to identify the need areas and species/ livestock production systems, on regional basis, of research for the next 10 years.
The public sector has a number of research institutes working in different areas. Unfortunately, they are not only poorly resourced but also being managed like traditional
public sector organizations. Most of these facilities are standalone without any interlinkages or support from other national or international institutions or data from the field, which in itself is a costly venture. A livestock research network that would link all
the research facilities and synchronize data from the field from research point of view is thus need of the time. This will allow evolution of an integrated research agenda without
any duplication and redundancy. The creation of such a network is cardinal responsibility of the Government. This network would be supported by a web-based digital platform to support virtual
discussions and online availability of research material. The government has decided to create a “Content Management System” (CMS) for optimizing the benefits of quality
applied research. Through provincial Livestock Department, proposed research facility (CMS), spanning across multiple public and private organizations would also develop close liaison with farmers and with extension services for developing applied research
agendas as well as testing their interventions.
2.6.16.1. THE LIVESTOCK EXPERIMENT STATIONS
There are 28 Livestock Experiment Stations/ Farms, including 9 poultry research farms, comprising thousands of acres of land. The policy vacuum did not allow them to attain
their actual potential. They somehow drifted in production of cash crops, which was not their mandate. The assigned task of research could not get the required priority as many of the completed projects were kept continued without authority and justification. The
production of animals without catering to any requirement or research need kept the staff and resources unduly engaged. Hence, requires a turn around by drastically curtailing
their misdirected adventures by replacing with targeted research as per their original mandate.
2.6.17. THE EXTENSION FRAMEWORK
The extension services are but in the rudimentary condition with much to do despite seeping sizeable chunk of budget. Extension workers are mostly ill-motivated with
little incentive to work and bring about the change. Extension is not medical treatment is a surprise for many. The concept of extension as capacity building of production and supply chain systems of various types is non-existent. It is rather
considered as provision of medicines at plethora of static hospitals, more in number than for humans.
Chapter 3
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OF PROVINCIAL
LIVESTOCK POLICY
3.1. THE DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK
Sustainable development of the Livestock & Dairy sectors is the basic mandate of L&DD
department. A holistic approach is required to encompass all facets of development. Hence, a development framework is being professed for optimal utilization of resources and enabling the stakeholders to take productive decisions in the very domains of livestock and dairy.
3.1.1 SUSTAINABLE LIVESTOCK SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
Sustainable livestock sector development was not possible in the absence of a comprehensive
policy on livestock, with expressed aims and intentions of the government to send explicitly clear signals across the markets to boost confidence of the stakeholders. Sustainable livestock
sector development entails a long term commitment of the government to bring about the promised change.
3.1.2 THE ENABLING INFRASTRUCTURE The provision of enabling business environment is the basic responsibility of the state. The
Public policy is the apparatus to crystalize and communicate the professed objectives of facilitation and stabilization of business environment. In the present scenario of livestock and
dairy development obligation, the government has three distinct entities for creating such environment viz. the L&DD, having deep penetration in the rural landscape with a huge infrastructure of research, training and in some cases production; PAMCO and PLDDB: both
Section 42 Companies, providing leverage to operate beyond bureaucratic constraints, and lastly the UVAS, Lahore, a dedicated university for the Animal and Veterinary Sciences.
The enabling environment warrants taking into account the marketing, financial, processing, research, production systems, standardization, documentation, traceability, disease
surveillance and institutional knowledge formation.
3.1.2.1. ROLE OF PAMCO
The role of PAMCO needs to be re-defined for making it more focused on tangible
delivery with measurable dimensions in the context of proposed policy interventions.
Instead of aiming at tall wish list of functions that are beyond the preview of single
organizations, PAMCO is required to concentrate on developing core support capability of
different layers across processing supply chain for creating enabling environment in
support of informal players who are destined to gain economies of scale and quality if
such support is provided to them. The same will help mobilize the whole value chain
process of the supply chain. Henceforth, PAMCO will invest in the physical infrastructure
of the processing industry only with focus on associated HR training and capacity
building. It is, in fact composite capacity building of small to medium scale informal
processing and mostly rudimentary packaging industry with the investment of modern
technology. The PAMCO will be working as sort of a shelf linking the secondary producer
with the tertiary market. Provision of certifications like ‘Halal’ and facilitating the
enterprise and investment in the very domains are intrinsic part of the redefined mission.
PAMCO in no case will enter into any of the primary production activities of livestock
and agriculture.
3.1.2.2. ROLE OF PLDDB
Orientation of PLDDB’s objectives needs to be aligned with the proposed strategic re-
positioning of the L&DD by diverting it away from all the activities it is performing
having institutional overlapping with L&DD department’s core functions like research,
preservation of breeds, establishment of SPUs and experimentation with feed regime etc.
Some of its declared objectives also trespass on the ones professed by the PAMCO. So no
tangible result has so far been produced, failing the intentions with which the idea was
conceived. The dairy sector development should be the lead objective of the PLDDB with
rest of livestock sector following suit. Investment in physical infrastructure, breed
improvement, research, involving in the decision regarding genetics should not be the
permissible area of venture for the PLDDB. In fact, PLDDB should be pulled out of all
sort of physical infrastructure and material handling.
PLDDB is destined to focus on the financial infrastructure building of the whole sector
with order of priority. It is required to identify the financial needs of small to medium
producers, production systems and informal supply chain actors; design small to medium
financial products with special nature of collateral, make possible with the help of data
created by the Virtual Governance System of the L&DD described in the document. The
PLDDB will act as a match maker between the producer, the supply chain actor and the
lending institutes with complete log of performance of the loan thus matured.
The window of strategic opportunity is a state that exists when internal capabilities of a
given individual or system comes in perfect harmony with favourable opportunities in the
external environment so that desired results are produced. The 73 % unbanked market is
denied that window of strategic opportunity. The same is being capitalized on by the
middleman. PLDDB will act as a competitor of the middleman and would provide tactical
maneuverability to the strategic financial (lending) partners in the proposed financial
framework for producing a conducive environment, for helping the market tapping
potential business opportunities, by helping provide access to the productive capital.
3.2. THE MARKET LED GROWTH
Promotion of private enterprise is at the heart of livestock policy, starting from the primary producer of livestock products i.e. the subsistence farmer up to the corporate producer,
processors, and other stakeholders. Private sector should be in the driving seat and government should work as a facilitator & stabilizer of business environment is soul of the
proposed policy. The concept envisages a growth led by the market. While facilitating and stabilizing the business environment, the government will not allow cartelization at the peril of fair market growth. The market distortions resulting in the wake of unfair market practices
are as much undesirable as are the government interventions to thwart the natural flow of markets.
3.3. THE GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK- PARADIGM SHIFT FROM
CURATIVE TO PREVENTIVE
The Punjab government has approved a strategic paradigm shift in the livestock sector governance from 99 % curative regime, presently in vogue, to 99% preventive regime and resultant re-positioning of the L&DD’s posture and policy interventions of the Government
of the Punjab along with resource allocations. This is a leap forward in the right direction and a very giant step from any yardstick. The bottom line is quite clear. The economic
losses of diseases are more pronounced in the livestock sector health governance. There was no logic to keep waiting for diseases to set in and then move for their treatment by providing medicines. The need was to prevent the disease from coming so as to avoid its economic
losses. Hence, the paradigm-shift with full focus on the hitherto neglected preventive side of sector governance for the sustainable livestock development.
3.3.1. L&DD AS LIVESTOCK ASSET MANAGER
The change in the paradigm while realizing the potential of livestock and promoting the
competition to check undue market distortions requires the L&DD to work as a facilitator and not merely the administrator. The role further seeks the L&DD to work as “Livestock Asset Manager of the Province” with all connotations of the description.
3.3.1.1. THE HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
The human resource development, particularly relating to various types of technicians, in
the livestock sector, are need of the hour. Without preparing a critical number of trained and skilled HR, the dream of L&DD as livestock asset manager of the province will be a forlorn hope. Since private sector is a partner in the sector development, a strict quality
assurance mechanism with appropriate level of licensing and registration of the HR with provision of ICT based verification will be put in place for ensuring better quality of
services to the sector.
3.3.2 DISEASE PREVENTION
Disease prevention is an area that needs to encompass a host of related domains.
3.3.2.1 DISEASE SURVEILLANCE AND FORECASTING
L&DD’s capacity is going to be uplifted to conduct permanent surveillance capable of detecting new exotic diseases, providing evidence being free from diseases, describing
distribution and level of occurrence of endemic diseases, and assessing progress in control and eradication of preventable diseases. Regulation to ensure disease monitoring and
reporting from private veterinary clinics, livestock markets, and slaughter/ processing facilities will be put in place, besides establishment of disease control and eradication areas for particular transmittable diseases.
Logical framework of disease surveillance and forecasting warrants devising protocols for
data collection, information processing and management, quarantine, movement restrictions, mass awareness, additional epidemiological research, and education and training in the very areas.
3.3.2.2 VACCINATION
Without vaccination, disease prevention is impossible. The government will facilitate
provision of vaccines to the livestock for preventable diseases. In the next three years the government will encourage to attain the vaccination of animals. The use of country
medicines will be promoted for putting the cure in the economically manageable limits of subsistence farmer. Other proposed interventions will help improve the general health of livestock, further mitigating the chances of disease.
3.3.2.3 ANIMAL HUSBANDRY PRACTICES
Standard animal husbandry practices are almost non-existent. The reasons are exclusion of
the discipline of animal husbandry from the Veterinary Universities a decade ago. The repercussions are far reaching and results are untenable. The need is to refocus on the
standard animal husbandry practices. Livestock sector is less in need of large number of physicians or surgeons and more in need of great number of good animal husbandry practitioners, who could educate the farming communities on the ways to manage their
livestock and keep it safe from the disease.
3.3.2.4 DEWORMING
This single intervention has the tremendous potential to increase the productivity and reduce the incidence of disease. In the next three years, the Government has decided to establish
standard working protocols against the Endo and Ecto-Parasites with complete prevalence mapping. This is one of the top priority areas.
3.3.3 FOOD AND NUTRITION
Feed means the balanced feed. Nutrition means the appropriate mix of nutrients as per the need of the type of livestock, taking into consideration the mineral deficiencies. The
Government will promote a standardization regime for the feed and nutrition so that maximum benefit can be obtained. The same shall also cover the actual nature and effect of different toxins and their antidotes.
3.3.4 EXTENSION SERVICES All the interventions aimed at enhancing the productivity of livestock production systems are
covered under the extension services. Appropriate set of extension services with measurable productivity and performance will be put in place. Mobility of L&DD staff is of prime
importance in any strengthening of Livestock Extension Services. The government is providing more than 4500 motor cycles, equipped with medical, diagnostics and AI kits along with fuel for each motorcycle, to the L&DD field and support staff for deep penetration
and provision of services at the door step of farming communities. The need is to re-define the role of extension services from provision of same from a static platform to a mobile and
dynamic one, which is in access of the farmers instantly, at their doorsteps.
3.3.5 CAPACITY BUILDING OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION SYSTEMS Capacity building of economically viable livestock production systems is of utmost importance for replication and propagation of the same. In the wake of proposed policy interventions, new livestock production models and systems are destined to evolve, the
lessons learnt and inference of best practices out of the successful models and production systems need to be synthesized into some institutional knowledge repository for stakeholders
to benefit from.
3.3.5.1 RESEARCH, EDUCATION AND TRAINING
Research, education and training are required regarding cost benefits of control, including diseases with sub-clinical expressions affecting production and economic losses of preventable diseases. This shall be the priority area of HR development for the next 10
years.
3.3.5.1.1 THE ROLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN LIVESTOCK
PRODUCTION
Higher education is of prime importance in developing the requisite HR for the livestock
sector. Theoretical aspect has overgrown at the cost of practical training. The Government has decided to start house job for the veterinary graduates to expose them to
practical management of the livestock health issues. The economic aspect of diseases needs to be more focused and PhDs in the areas of livestock economics, besides Animal Husbandry shall be preferred. The urgent need is to produce livestock asset managers by
the Veterinary Universities. A major review of curriculum and admission policy would be required. For any research and PhD, true selection of the rural area and livestock
production system shall be ensured instead of wasting time and efforts on peri-urban areas of Lahore and Faisalabad, which can never be the true representative sample.
3.3.5.2 RE-DISCOVERING THE ROLE OF L&DD’S LIVESTOCK
EXPERIMENT STATIONS/ FARMS
The livestock experiment farms will be used for experimentation and its practical demonstrations. Each farm shall be encouraged to develop excellence of specialty in at
least one area of livestock. Adoption of applied technologies with quantifiable results and practical commercial and public demonstration will be promoted at L&DD’s Research Farms.
3.3.5.3 R&D AND THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
To promote quality research with commercial applicability, it has been approved that the
intellectual property rights of such a creation shall be protected.
3.4 PARTNERSHIPS FOR SOCIO-ECONOMIC CHANGE- LIVESTOCK
ACTIVISTS: WOMEN, LAMBARDARS, IMAM MASAJID AND STUDENTS
Livestock is the oldest professions of the world. It is not only an economic activity, rather a way of life. Its various issues cannot be addressed without enlisting the support of the whole
rural society. Woman is the one who introduced the concept of “JIT’ just in time as a housewife and is the one who spends maximum time with the livestock. She carries the
ability and passion to understand the desire and needs of the animals and is in a position to immediately attend to them in time of need. Rural livestock landscape is but a story of women and livestock growing together. Any policy that does not incorporate the pivotal role
of rural women will not produce results. The Government has decided to encourage the participation of rural women, Imam Masajid and students as catalysts of socio-economic
development of the farmer - the primary producer of the livestock.
3.5 THE REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
3.5.1 PROVINCIAL DRUG CONTROL & MARKETING FACILITATION AUTHORITY
The logical corollary of post 18th Amendment is the creation of a Provincial Drug Control and Marketing Facilitation Authority to regulate the production, marketing, sale and
administration of medicines and products pertaining to the livestock sector. The Government has decided to create such authority.
3.5.2 CONTROL OF ZOONOTIC DISEASES
A considerable number of infectious diseases in humans are of zoonotic origin. Government
of the Punjab has decided to establish a Zoonotic Diseases Research Institute with the help of UVAS, KEMU, University of Punjab’s Center of Excellence of Molecular Biology, BZU, Multan and Forensic Science Agency Punjab. It will go a long way to ensure bio-security and
will help establish protocols of bio-security in the province. The proposed Institute will also determine the industry codes and entry and exit specifications and protocols of livestock
products into the province. It will also focus to the utilization of the concept of “ONE-HEALTH”.
3.5.2.1. THE ISSUE OF UNWHOLESOME MEAT
The issue of unwholesome meat has potential to degenerate anytime in some outbreak of zoonotic disease, besides playing havoc with health of the public. Dynamics of
unwholesome meat need to be comprehended to grasp the issue for devising credible solution. Prevalence of preventable diseases like infestation of parasites, diseases causing
major economic losses, in animals is major cause of providing constant supply of dead/ near to death/ diseased animals to the market of unwholesome meat. Because of exorbitant profit margins in such heinous trade, this constant production is main cause of concern with
untenable consequences. Due to the very market, haram animals’ meat also finds way along dead animals’ meat into the market, adding salt to the injury. The menace requires multi-
pronged strategy i.e. shrinking the supply chain and raising the entry barriers. The former needs the prevention of diseases that are easily preventable; a complete paradigm shift of the department has been proposed for the same. the paradigm shift from curative to preventive
like deworming, vaccination, health management are some of the intrinsic parts of the proposed strategy. Raising the entry barriers warrant pincer movement of both the public
and the Government. The 9211 meat tag enquiry system, the first of its kind in the world, regarding quality assurance of fresh meat, in Lahore - the biggest meat market of the province, puts control in the hands of the public. A comprehensive mass sensitization
campaign has started creating much needed demand for the strategic reform. Well-coordinated administrative actions of L&DD with different Government Agencies and
District Administrations, against the unwholesome meat mafia, like arrests, detention orders, etc. have made the entry into the ugly business very difficult.
There is another aspect of this unholy business: the price capping devastates the genuine producer and processor of meat. It is pre-requisite to control such monstrous activity that price capping may be removed by the Government; and by the private sector, which induces
its own type of price capping by resorting to unfair market practices in cattle markets at the peril of subsistence level farmer. A better return on produce to the primary producer i.e.
subsistence level farmer will work as incentive to produce more and healthy animals to fetch better value for the produce.
Any workable strategy to control the menace must incorporate the replacement of dead animal with live animal as owners of dead animals, in most of cases, are poorest of the poor.
The same may be covered under some scheme, having easy pay back of cost of replacement in instalments. It will help document the causes of the death besides enabling physical disposal of the dead animal’s carcass and eliminating chances of such carcass ending up as
unwholesome meat at some sale point for unwanted human consumption. It will also be viable from another point of view as the person holding the dead animal is more likely to
genuinely raise the replaced live animal, having history of rearing animals. Disposal places are required to be declared/ established for burial/ incineration of dead animals by TMAs,
with provision of complete documentation of details of the carcass thus brought for disposal.
3.5.3 LIVESTOCK: AGRO BASED INDUSTRY
The livestock sector shall be declared an Agro-based industry with all the associated benefits and exemptions a declared industry can benefit from.
3.6 THE SERVICE DELIVERY FRAMEWORK
The service delivery framework is, in fact, the logical framework and a natural corollary of
the aforementioned discussion on policy points. It encompasses the service delivery architecture pertaining to ensuring the food security, competitiveness of the sector, prosperity of stakeholders and generating exportable surpluses. Each of the said areas is so exhaustive
that separate chapters have been dedicated for discussion and expounding on the each.
Chapter 4
FOOD SECURITY
Livestock provides natural capital such as meat, milk, wool, hide, rangeland and pasture; financial capital such as cash, savings, credit, insurance, gifts; and social capital such as traditions, wealth,
prestige, identity, respect, friendship, marriage dowries and festivities and power capital such as traction and biogas, besides being a source of organic fertilizer, converting waste products into inputs to the production of high-value food. The livestock also satisfies religious needs. Over the
past few years, the world has been hit by a series of economic, financial and food crises. Price volatility and weather shocks, due to climate change, are likely to undermine food security. In this
context, promoting livelihood resilience and food and nutrition security has become central to the policy agendas of the Punjab government. Smallholder farmers need to be at the center of this priority to play a leading role in the investment efforts, needed to achieve it.
4.1. DEFINITION AND NARRATION
The state of food security exists when all people, at the time of need, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food
preferences for an active and healthy life. From this standard, we have to go a long way to materialize the dream. Besides quantity, the quality standards are also of prime importance to
ensure food security. The people are required to be educated to fathom the true concept of food security. Livestock products are relevant to the concept of food security from two angles. Firstly, provision of proteins, milk and associated products from the livestock source.
Secondly the capacity to make economic decisions (choices) more easily from the income generated with the help of livestock, particularly amongst the subsistence level farmers and
rural women.
4.2. LIVESTOCK FEED MIX REDEFINED The conventional livestock feed mix has been enlarged to encompass the silage, fodder, hay,
nutrients, water, and last but not the least the essential minerals for the animals. It is imperative to grasp the nettle of holistic development of the livestock sector in the special
perspective of food security. The industrial waste, culled dates, the leftover of harvesters in paddy and wheat, needs to be focused to be explored for their possible use in livestock feed/ silage.
4.2.1. SILAGE, FODDER & HAY
The policy specifically envisages to:
1. Make Central Punjab the silage producing mine for the whole of Pakistan; Middle East,
Iran, Afghanistan and beyond. There are possible five produces of silage in a year from
the fertile lands and favourable climate of the Central Punjab.
2. Produce hay for the whole of Pakistan with handsome export markets.
3. Encourage packaging technologies.
4. Subsidize production of packaging materials and customized machinery for the silage
packaging will be promoted.
5. Create special export zones with tax holidays for next 10 years for attracting FDI in the
areas of fodder production, hay and silage making and exports, besides sale in the local
markets. L&DD will earmark under-utilized land at its farms for kick starting the
proposed initiative. It will also cover local production of customized machinery.
6. Undertake efforts to increase production of quality fodder seeds through necessary
incentives, arranging foundation seeds of different high yielding fodder varieties and
modern scientific farming procedures. A special emphasis of fodder research will be to
map and remove the deficiencies of nutrients in various lands for requisite quality
fodder production.
7. Ensure round the year availability of hay, silage and fodder for the local livestock at
market competitive rates in appropriate packaging and with requisite standard of
preservation. The Government will consider merger of Fodder Research Institute by
establishing its satellites at each L&DD farms, instead of continuation of tis working in
isolation.
8. Make timely availability of fodder seed and its multiplication in the respective areas,
having demonstration plots, the Punjab Seed Corporation can play a pivotal role.
4.2.2. NUTRIENTS & MINERALS Nutrients (micro-nutrients) and minerals are of as much importance for the animals as they are for the humans. Many metabolic disorders of animals, with potential of severely retarding
their growth and productivity are due to shortage of appropriate quantity of nutrients and minerals. The policy envisages ensuring provision of all the requisite nutrients and minerals
to the animals as their basic right. The industry standards will be propagated for ensuring provision of the same.
4.2.3. RESTOCKING OF RANGELANDS One-third of the livestock is dependent on grazing lands. Scientific Rangeland Management is need of the hour. Various projects for restocking of rangelands and afforestation of such
eco-systems in the hilly tracts had been implemented in the past. A complete catalog of all such intervention need to be prepared with the help of donor agencies as they used to be the funding source of such projects with documentation of the outcome so that lessons learnt
could be incorporated in future plans for ameliorating the condition of range lands.
4.2.3.1. PREFERRED FLORA FOR RESTOCKING OF RANGE LANDS
Following species have been declared the flora of preference in the restocking of rangelands
due to various economic, ecological and nutritious requirements:
Sr. No. COMMON NAME BOTANICAL NAME
1 Kikar Acacia nilotica
2 Jaman Eugenia jambolana
3 Sohanjana Moringa oleifera
4 Sehtut Morus alba
5 Beri Ziziphus mauritiana
6 Khajoor Phoenix dactylifera
7 Neem Azadirachta indica
4.2.4 MAPPING OF SEASONAL MIGRATION ROUTES OF LIVESTOCK
Traditional livestock rearing is spanning across waste migratory routes. These routes, ecological conditions along these routes and potential of carrying and spreading disease of one into another are of vital importance to be incorporated into the institutional knowledge
bank of the L&DD for better management of rangelands, disease prevention, establishing the processing industry along very routes and provision of quality genetic material to the herds
for increased livestock production.
4.2.5 THE NOMADIC LIVESTOCK CLANS
The nomadic livestock clans are to be mapped for provision of extension services to them without compromising their mobility and professional traits evolved over centuries. Their unique best practices are need to be reflected into courses taught at universities. They deserve
to be researched and presented to the outside world for enhancing marketing prospects.
4.2.6 MAPPING OF TRADE ROUTES OF LIVESTOCK
Mapping of trade routes of livestock, particularly of Eid days will help create the processing
industry and collection routes along those routes to tap on the opportunity that is concentrated to few days of Eid-ul-Izha. This mapping will help understand the changing trends and finding new areas of activity.
4.3 THE LIVESTOCK PRODUCT MIX REDEFINED
Slaughterhouse by-products like blood, bones, casings, ingesta, etc. besides milk, meat, skins
& hides, hooves, and their derivative products are all part of the livestock product mix. Processing of animal casing, blood and ingesta will help contribute towards the prosperity
and cost competitiveness of the whole supply chain of slaughtering/ sacrificial animals.
4.4 SOCIO-ECONOMIC SECURITY OF THE PRODUCER
Livestock is not simple economics in the backdrop of Punjab’s culture. It is socio-economic habit, crystallized over centuries. Theory of hierarchy is always more pertinent when it
comes to have livestock in the Punjab. To tap on this unique characteristic of a Punjabi mind, be it urban or rural, poor or rich, the provision of capital and attention for livestock is not at
dearth in the Punjab. The policy envisages ensuring the socio-economic security of primary livestock producer for helping him produce the requisite livestock cost effectively. To capitalize on the concept, the Government will introduce special features regarding livestock
in school curriculum, a basic special technical course at high school level and preference to those having read this course while hiring in projects aimed at rural/ community
development. Livestock is a profession practiced by the Prophets and its importance should be reflected in the national narration. Without ensuring socio-economic security of primary producer of livestock, food security will be a forlorn hope as rural urban migration will
continue to barren the livestock production systems.
4.4.1 THE ISSUE OF PRICE CAPPING
4.4.1.1 PRICE CAPPING BY THE GOVERNMENT
Meat price capping is the most serious issue that is damaging the whole local meats
production, supply chain and processing industry. Through price capping, cost of the production is not allowed to be recovered from the consumer as is the case of other produce of human consumption. The same sends the ripples, backward in the
production system making its growth anemically retarded. The Government is considering lifting the price capping on sale of fresh slaughtered meat. If there were
not available market for by-products of slaughtered animals, the business of meat slaughtering would have been knocked out of existence. The concept of food security warrants keeping the producer of food products buoyant so that production systems
keep on running and producing with dependability.
4.4.1.2 PRICE CAPPING BY THE UNFAIR MARKET PRACTICES
There is another aspect of price capping. It pertains to unfair market practices and cartelization. It is purported by the private sector e.g. the informal price capping that
is preventing the milk producer to recover the cost of production, is done by certain players, by resorting to dry milk and whey powder import. There is need to identify
and map all such informal price capping induced by the unfair market practices of the private sector. For the sake of food security such trends shall be arrested forthwith and shall be tracked and monitored on permanent basis. The Government will also
help support the primary producer of milk and small retail milk collectors through institutional interventions by helping them acquire small pasturing and packing units
of milk for better return on their investment and provision of quality milk in the vicinity of milk production clusters. For implementing the desired objectives, Idara-e-Kissan will be revived being the best example to cite from past.
4.5 THE BREEDING FRAMEWORK
The breeding factor is an important reason of late maturity and long intervals of calving. Shortening of service period by one day yields an increase of 5 to 7 liters milk and one estrus
cycle results in additional 105 to 147 liters milk. Reproductive disorders in females lead to significant economic inefficiency. Studies show that Punjab is losing about 11.57 million tons of milk each year on account of this reproductive disorder. When converted into monetary
figures, this loss comes out to be about PKR 120 billion in buffalos only.
4.5.1 THE PROGENY TESTING PROGRAMME The existing progeny testing programmes for Sahiwal and Cholistani Cattle, Nili-Ravi
Buffalo and effectiveness of A.I. both in private and public sector farms shall be evaluated to ascertain the factual position and to introduce the corrective measures to move towards producing the requisite number of quality animals for domestic and exportable use. The same
policy will be implemented for evaluation and future development of the small ruminants. The devised SOPs of Breed Improvement Act shall be implemented in letter and spirit. To
further improve the A.I. results, and for timely heat detection, availability of teasers to the farmers shall be ensured.
For bull mother scheme, there will be a genetic pool of superior or required gene for the characters market demand, for future breeding program of our dairy breeds which can be
achieved by developing each breed champions like Sahiwal or Nili-Ravi buffalo breed champions. These champions will have genetic pool of minimum 200 adult animals. The animals will be kept and bred as per criteria defined by livestock experts. Royalty will be
paid on selected bull of the experts farmers whereas below average bulls will be discarded.
4.5.2. THE BREEDING PLAN
AI will be incentivized and government will set up AI training centers across province involving renowned genetics companies where possible. Six such training centers will be
commissioned. Every village will be provided a bull for the natural service till the time AI capability as per the requisite quality and quantity will be developed. The bull thus provided
to the village will have periodical screening, overhauling and shifting to avoid diseases and to ensure spread of diverse genetic makeup by exchanging bulls. There will be a breeding plan for the whole of Punjab with elaborated details on the basis of specie and area. Best
quality semen, true to its breed, will be provided to the farmer at subsidized rates. Complete documentation and traceability of new progeny will be kept to streamline and harness the
genetic prowess of different breeds.
The economic model of the poor breeder due to price capping seems to have been disturbed, which has led to panic sale. The sale and slaughtering of under-age animals both small and large, alarming rate of slaughtering of heifers, female sheep goat and buffalos/ cattle, still
having reproductive age, should be taken seriously. It requires a continuous monitoring with reference to the local consumption and export in connection with weight and sex of the
animal slaughtered.
4.5.3. THE BREEDING POLICY AND RULES
Distinct Breeding Policies for all sorts of animals: local, exotic or mix will be prepared along with framing of rules thereof. The Government will widely disseminate the Breeding Policy
and Rules, with clearly laid down areas of responsibility, in Urdu, for the benefit of farmers’ communities. There will be prepared a herd/ inventory book for each district/ region
regarding all indigenous breeds of animals and birds.
4.6 PREFERRED AREAS OF HR DEVELOPMENT
Applied research in the following areas, with special reference to livestock, has been declared the preferred areas of HR development for the next 10 years:
1. Animal husbandry 2. Economics
3. Statistics 4. Breed improvement and Genetics/ Genomics
5. Nutrition and Metabolic Disorders 6. Molecular Biology 7. Microbiology
8. Biochemistry 9. Pathology 10. Business Education
11. Curriculum Development 12. Dairy Technologies
13. Meat Technologies 14. Leather Technologies 15. Marketing
16. Banking & Finance 17. E-Commerce
18. Quality Assurance & Management 19. Sociology & Anthropology 20. International Business/ Trade
21. Trade (WTO) Laws 22. Animal Husbandry
23. Management 24. Mass Communication 25. Electro-Mechanical Engineering
26. Information & Communication Technologies 27. Livestock Technologies
28. Processing Technologies 29. Food Technologies
Moreover, Livestock Technician will be aggressively developed in the next 10 years. The
candidates from rural areas and women will be given preference.
4.7 SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE SOUTH & CHOLISTAN
Livestock is the backbone and perhaps the only industry for the South of Punjab. The area has huge potential for development. It needs inroads of development deep into its natural systems
of production. The South of Punjab comprised of three administrative divisions of Multan, DG Khan and Bahawalpur. They were ignored and repeatedly mistargeted in the past due to varied reasons. The livestock is their life line. However, like primary producers of livestock anywhere
else in the country, they historically remained at the mercy of ruthless middleman phenomenon.
There are seven distinct features of the livestock economy here:
1. Enterprising and innovation of people with cooperative nature. 2. Vast natural wild rangelands- reducing the cost of rearing. 3. Organic and wild nature of livestock and its feed with staggering potential of growth
and value addition. 4. Deep catchment area - trade routes stretching into neighbouring provinces and
beyond. 5. Graveyard of schemes and interventions of past governments. 6. The presence of a comparatively less depleted gene pool for Cholistani cattle.
7. The migratory and semi-wild nature of the Cholistani cattle. 8. Colossal scale of impact, an apt policy and logical interventions could generate.
A detailed analysis of each has been made. Following policy goals are suggested:
1. The present livestock set up of CDA is unlikely to achieve the targeted objectives due to lack of HR and institutional support.
2. A state of the art Livestock University will be established with international level facilities of research at Bahawalpur for producing requisite number of quality HR.
3. Special programmes will be launched, targeting specific areas within the South for
the development of specific breeds and livestock production systems. 4. A special export zone, within the South, will be created for fetching better value of
livestock produced by the South. 5. Government of the Punjab will align all of its social interventions in tandem with the
pattern of livestock industry development in the South.
6. The area has the gene pool of Cholistani cattle. The very nature of the animal as semi-wild with migratory trait requires a special caution and care as it has the potential for
spreading of endemic or epidemic diseases enroute its migratory tracts, endangering the whole livestock population in the area.
7. Capacity building for the delivery of stated objectives will be prioritized within the
L&DD. 8. Government will pay special attention for HR capacity building in the area of
economics and marketing. 9. Branchless banking will be encouraged in the area for provision of cost effective
productive capital and easy transactions.
10. Making south the hub of livestock production and trade with sizable value addition and growth in the GDP of South.
11. Special efforts shall be made for selective cross breeding for production of a genetically superior quality animal to fetch better value in the market.
4.8 MANAGING THE TRIBAL AREAS’ LIVESTOCK
As much as Cholistan will be targeted for production of large ruminants, Provincially Administered Tribal Areas of DG Khan and Rajanpur can become a hub of small ruminants’
production. The government shall focus on the Tribal Areas’ livestock as the same is only industry and livelihood available to the tribal people. Appropriate disease management,
restocking practices, education, training and provision of processing industry in the area will impact tremendously on all: the man, the animal, the eco-system and economy and social life of the area. It shall thus be the preferred area of development.
4.8.1 WARBLE FLY CONTROL & ERADICATION MANAGEMENT Warble fly control and eradication programme needs to be enhanced and boosted to control and eradicate the menace of warble fly that has the devastating effect on the production and health of livestock of the area. Henceforth, warble fly control programme will include
deworming interventions as an integral part of disease management. Warble fly control coupled with deworming would in itself pull the livestock out of the production depression
into the vibrant industry of the area with associated prosperity.
4.9 CONSERVATION OF ANIMAL BIO-DIVERSITY
The province has rich and diverse genetic resources of livestock in the form of a large number of species, breeds, and strains within these species. Punjab has some of the best breeds of cattle and buffaloes with traits for dairy and meat. In sheep and goat several highly prolific breeds are
available. The newly developed breed of Nukra in goat and Mundri in sheep are two good examples of private enterprising. The breeds of livestock and poultry are essentially the
products of long term natural selection and are better adapted to environment and diseases, and perform under low and medium inputs. Some of these breeds are suited to particular agro-climatic conditions of the country. Some of these breeds have useful genes for fast growth and
prolificacy. Such utility genes and breeds would be identified, conserved and utilized for breeding and research.
The focus would be on conservation of indigenous breeds of livestock and poultry. Pastoral communities, particularly those managing migratory animals like cattle, sheep, goats, camel
etc. shall be supported through creation of facilities along their migratory routes for feeding, breeding, healthcare, camping, and market channels for their produce and animals. Indigenous knowledge of pastoral communities about animal maintenance and breeding would be
documented with active involvement of communities, breeders’ associations and NGOs.
4.10 THE TRADE PROTOCOLS OF LIVESTOCK AND LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
4.10.1 . THE EXPORT REGIME PROTOCOLS
The export protocols require that no branded livestock product leaves country without acquiring standards specification certificate. It is important for developing the quality
image of the brand made in Pakistan. The regime must incorporate the export of virus strains and those of bacteria for avoiding their genetic re-engineering, mutation and their
possible re-introduction back in the country as a tool of biological warfare.
4.10.2 . THE IMPORT REGIME PROTOCOLS
There is an urgent need to establish the import regime protocols in the domain of livestock products in general and genetic products in particular. The exotic breeds carry many
diseases that have devastating effects for the bio-security of the local eco-systems. The import of vaccines also needs to be regulated in the very context. The Government has decided to develop a quality HR for the purpose by imparting first rank training and
exposure. This is one of the areas where donor agencies may invest as a development priority and their mandated responsibility.
4.10.3 . THE QUARANTINE
Establishment of quarantine facilities and that of their standards and technologies have registered phenomenal improvement. A state of the art quarantine regime shall be put in
place to ensure bio-security of the province. This is also one of those areas where foreign donors may invest to share their international development responsibility.
4.10.4 . THE TRANSPORTATION REGIME PROTOCOLS
Transportation protocols for transportation of live animals do not exist. The same results in cruelty purported to the animals and economic loss in terms of stress that is induced to the
animals, rendering them prone to diseases and weight loss. Appropriate transportation protocols will be devised and put in place for compliance. The concept axiomatically extends to all sorts of livestock products.
4.11 INDIGENOUS VACCINE PRODUCTION
Indigenous vaccine production is of utmost importance for the food security and
development of livestock as per the proposed policy objectives. Hence, Government will also encourage the private sector to come forward, invest and establish indigenous vaccine
production facilities as per the international standards and quality.
4.12 DISASTER MANAGEMENT PROTOCOLS
There are various types of disasters like earthquakes, floods, natural clematis e.g. rain,
hailstorm, climatic upheaval, draught, fire, industrial disaster, nuclear radiation fallout etc.
Each needs a peculiar type of response. However, dependable stocks of silage and hay need to be maintained with systematic refreshing by using old and adding new stocks. The private
stock position and its geographical existence may be mapped to raise resources in time of emergency. Shifting of livestock in case of any eventuality and disposal of perished one to
avoid diseases spread are pivot of any coherent disaster management protocols. Coordination and technical assistance of L&DD with other agencies also warrants a well thought out and scientific plan. A separate disaster management and rehabilitation plan will
be prepared and made public in Urdu and local languages.
Chapter 5
COMPETITIVENESS
Competitiveness of livestock production systems and actors, including that of supply and value
chains is one of the key policy areas of focus. If the requisite competitiveness does not come in the wake of present policy interventions, the sector will not start gaining economies of scale and helping the subsistence farmer moving up towards commercial farming and value addition. It encompasses
all facets of economy that have even the remotest link with livestock production and liquidation. Mid Term Development Framework (MTDF) incorporated a shift towards the competitiveness through
higher private-sector investment and to improve “Total Factor Productivity (TFP)” with concept of three-year rolling plans. Incentivizing & developing local strengths for increasing competitive advantage in various sectors of the economy is pivot of the strategy. TFP is a variable that accounts
for effects in total output not caused by traditionally measured inputs of labour and capital. It measures joint effects of many factors: innovation, economies of scale, managerial skill, changes in
“organization of production”. TFP is more intangible (virtual) as it can range from technology to knowledge of worker (human
capital). Human capital is a stock of knowledge, habits, social personality attributes, like creativity, embodied in the ability to perform labour so as to produce economic value. Innovative growth &
efficiency are regarded as two of the biggest sub-sections of TFP, the former possessing "special" inherent features such as positive externalities and non-rivalness- enhancing its position as a driver of economic growth. Studies reveal that while labour and investment are important contributors, TFP
may account for up to 60% of growth within economies. The policy envisages harnessing the potential of innovation in the organization of production,
besides other allied options to make the whole sector competitive. The more the sector becomes competitive, the more value will be produced in the value chain with inherent tendency to take the
route to the primary producer of livestock, the subsistence farmer, as per the design of proposed policy interventions. The more the value lands at the subsistence farmer, the more the evolution of small commercial farmer. Availability of critical number of small commercial farmers (their
economies of scale) will kick start the basic collection chain/ organization (s) of livestock produce by minimizing the operational cost, which even the corporate and donor investment has failed to
induce.
5.1. CHANGING THE SERVICE DELIVERY MODEL- THE VIRTUAL GOVERNANCE
Governance model assumes special significance when it comes to service delivery of basic
services pertaining to the roles and responsibilities of the government. The impact of the
quality of service delivery is an undeniable proven fact. But when the scope and scale of
engagement is as large as the present policy envisages, the innovation in the governance
model assumes utmost importance. The volume of a generation’s work may be done in a
couple of years. Hence, the concept of Virtual Governance is invented and converted into
reality with measurable outcomes, which are otherwise not possible in the traditional set ups.
There are 220 working days in Pakistan. Since a working day comprises of 8 hours, 220
working days divided by 3 is equal to 73 days. Service delivery, in fact, is done only for 73
days out of a calendar year of 365 days, which is a colossal loss of the precious time and
resources deployed that remain idle for two third of the time, incurring considerable
opportunity and redundancy costs, culminating into compromising seriously the quality and
quantity of service delivery and erosion of public trust in governance institutions. The virtual
governance system enables to provide the service delivery 24/ 7.
Virtual Governance operates on the concept of Government being more virtual in nature
(interaction, management, functions, services etc.) than physical in existence. Law of the land is a codified law. Since service delivery is done through SOPs, which are basically extremely refined (specific) codification of rules with distinct “limits”. Just like electricity
which is either on or off or binary language, which is either “-0-” “-1-”, packets (virtual) of service delivery can be made available round the clock in plenty with pre-programming of
desired response, constructed in some robust business model. It is thus a complete business solution to reduce the activity time differential exponentially for attaining policy goals, in near future (otherwise possible in distant future) for a complete paradigm shift of the L&DD,
without entangling efforts and energy on physical infrastructure and operational re-invention. Existing resources by adjusting the barriers as per desired limits and “Virtual Governance
Business Model” would be used for the purpose as a force multiplier to increase the surface area of activity for increasing the number of activities and frequency of activities for pro-actively facilitating transactions. It is simply doing future in strides.
The prevalent tele-density in the Punjab and use of ICT is at the heart of the proposed model.
There are 140 million cell phone connections in Pakistan. One can have instant, direct, dynamic and meaningful access to as much persons if connected through an ICT based business solution as described above. Conventional paper based communication and data
handling systems are costly in terms of time, efforts and create picture at “undesirable level” that can be manipulated easily. Replacing the paper based conventional system with e-
government modules still does not alter the outcome. When not constructed into and introduced through some viable composite business solution, which rarely happens even in developed economies, cost doubles; redundancy, duplication of key punching/ management
functions and easy manipulation of entered data further blinds the policy managers from ground realities and shifting sands. Cost of connectivity and problem of electricity still
persist. Ordinary mobile phone sets more than fulfills the requirement. Virtual Governance as a composite business solution is thus designed to eliminate all such inefficiencies, shortcomings and to bring productivity by instantly and exponentially increasing the
meaningful connectivity and flow of apposite information amongst all stakeholder. The proposed concept has extended the government beyond ‘Restricted by time Activity, making
it “Ever Available”. The policy aim at dynamically registering and engaging all the farmers in next 3 years by making them active first hand users of this business model of governance facilitation. It is a leap forward on e-governance. It is simply doing work of 5 years in one
year.
5.2 THE MARKET INFRASTRUCTURE
Markets provide the facility to make business transactions. They provide platforms to exchange the requisite information amongst the buyer and sellers regarding the products. The exchange of information requires structuring of the message regarding the products and
offerings. Showcasing is but an expression of that message communicated in the market. The intrinsic function of the market is to maximize the offering of a given product. This is called
competition, which fetches the best value for the produce. Prices are not traded in the fully functional/ developed markets; value chains are. Value and pricing are two distinct entities
that can only be separated through vibrant market mechanics. Without creation of value chain and resultant value gain for a set of given products, the competitiveness and prosperity is a forlorn hope. The proposed policy has fully incorporated these dynamics while designing
policy interventions and setting policy goals.
5.2.1 THE INFORMATION DISSEMINATION AND VERTICAL MARKET LINKAGES The policy envisages creating specific yardsticks and their measuring protocols through
which market information can be exchanged. There shall not be allowed information blackouts and limiting of offerings for transaction in the markets. This will stretch from the
primary markets to the tertiary markets. The Government will help the private sector to create such systems to cater to specific market needs on the patterns of one L&DD has devised and deployed. The data so generated in the wake of virtual governance will help
develop such business solutions for particular markets to eliminate conventional distortions. Vertical market linkages are of prime importance while designing the same. They will bring
together the primary producer and end user of the produce. Middleman along the price chain will be replaced with the genuine business actors (facilitators) across the value chain, with each transaction pushing the value gain to the next higher level. The Government will ensure
that markets are functioning vibrantly and there occurs no distortion.
5.2.2 THE ECO-MARKETING ZONING- LOCALIZED CATTLE BAZARS The presence of L&DD department is one of the heaviest on the rural landscape of Punjab. Recently, the L&DD has successfully launched 9211 SMS service of quick response
facilitation regime for farmers, encompassing set of pertinent livestock services, ranging from disease surveillance, diagnostics to preventive coverage of vaccines; reproductive facilitation to help in the prospective purchase of targeted animal produce from the farmers in
future. Credible real time data collection is the pivot of the system. The Government intends to make the province disease free. A phased approach has been devised. In the Punjab, after
every few miles the dialect of local people is changed. There is great diversity in socio-economic patterns. This natural evolution has historically created many ‘Mandis’ or localized markets, which have grown to the size of even district and tehsil headquarters over time. The
need is to tap on this natural evolutionary trend in the Punjab. Mostly they are the junctures of many crossroads.
The Government has decided to use the defunct octori posts as relay centers of the livestock services owing to their presence on the main roads along big rural junctions, also touching
peri-urban limits: more than 500 in number. A staff from amongst the existing will be deployed along the same with provision of 4580 motor cycles, equipped with necessary
medical kits, and connected thorough 9211 platform of ICT system with farmers, to provide desired services, with documentation of each interaction.
Transportation cost is one of the biggest barriers for the farmer to make a handsome deal at the traditional cattle market. Small cattle selling points or bazars for few hours on specified
days may be arranged in clusters of one or two UCs along the physical infrastructure of L&DD, including these relay centers, having ample open spaces within or nearby. It will
instantly provide relief to the poor breeders with no need of traditional cattle market paraphernalia and every opportunity to get the animals medically inspected and handsomely traded without botheration of bearing extra cost of transportation or panic sale. It will help
unleash the possibility of farmers’ much needed local cooperatives once the livestock sector productivity starts increasing. It will also minimize the spread of diseases due to unchecked
long distance movements of animals in and out of their respective eco-zones. It is sort of creating eco-marketing zones along local trade routes, evolved in decades with every possibility of generating goodwill for the government and bringing back the much needed
trust of poor farmers on the government institutions.
5.2.3 TOWARDS THE VIRTUAL MARKETS
The provision and successful deployment of virtual governance modules through 9211
platform and the ease of real time quality data generation in bulk across all platforms through
ordinary mobile sets, operating on all Telcos has given rise the possibility of creating a
virtual stock exchange of livestock produce, operating on ordinary mobile phones. The
government would help the private sector develop one. The L&DD would approach the State
Bank of Pakistan and SECP for technical exposure of stakeholders for evolving the concept
to a stage, from where private enterprise would take it up to the next generation as a vibrant
market entity. It has tremendous potential of creating vertical market linkages. It will be a
pre-cursor of pre-order economic revolution and will give access to the primary producer to
the much elusive productive capital. It will transform the livestock economy, with spillover
effects on other sectors of the economy. This area may have special interest for the
international development institutions, keeping in view their mandate.
The concept envisages L&DD & private business entities jointly conceiving, designing and
developing mobile financial products, tailored on the specific needs of the livestock & dairy
sectors. It will create, for the rural poor, in the livestock & dairy sectors, in future, a financial
infrastructure for a unique credit line to operate through virtual governance system for
extending the hitherto unbanked segments the benefits of productive financial products to
eliminate the role of “middle man”. It will craft virtual vertical market linkages for
liquidation of livestock products for translating financial benefits (better value for the
produce) directly to the poor livestock farmers (primary producers) without letting them
resort to the middle man.
5.3 THE FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE Financial architecture may be designed and developed through the policy intervention but markets cannot be dictated to operate through a given financial architecture. Markets shape
their own financial dynamics that caters to their peculiar needs. The bottom line is the flexibility of the financial infrastructure to cater to specific needs of markets.
5.3.1 INSTITUTIONAL RESPONSE TO THE MIDDLEMAN PHENOMENON
It should be in the basics of designing a financial infrastructure for livestock markets that is
flexible enough to accommodate ever-changing needs of the market place dealing with the livestock produce, the majority of which is of perishable nature with high concentration of value and swift liquidity. The nature of collateral is also unique. Conventional definition of
collateral may be the animal mass/ numbers of given animals or some landed asset but actual collateral being used in the market for the financing thorough the local middleman is the
enterprising history of the farmer and the shelf space he occupies in the production channel. This may send chills through spine of a traditional banker but at the end of the day they are the ones with huge pile up of non-performing loans. Nobody ever heard about a middleman
financer with struck up loans. The policy envisages encouraging the lending institutions, business entities, NGOs, individuals and higher education institutes to research and design
such financial products that could compete with the middleman in the market to provide 73% un-banked population access to the banking market. Branchless banking may become harbinger in this venture for which L&DD has already engaged the market players.
The middleman provides the farmer with a credit line that operates in kind at a time of
farmer’s production need. The middleman uses the principle of deferred payment to supplier of agri inputs, provided to the farmer through operation of the informal credit line. A fraction
of the credit line may be used informally to meet some personal emergency requirement but again cash is not given to the farmer. If some bank moves ahead to tap on this concept, it may provide similar credit line to the farmer on analogous qualifications. The competitive
edge that would bring down the cost of such financial product would be the invoking of mark up only when the transaction takes place through that particular credit line. This will keep the
bank’s books in healthy condition while ensuring financial discipline of the product user. The advance of credit line would be reflected in the performance of lending operations. The duration of markup would reduce the cost with obvious benefits to the user. The performance
of loans will mitigate the overall risk factor, making the market commercially viable instead of becoming a dumping ground of bogged down capital.
The 9211 platform is especially designed to create enabling environment for the possibility of exploring described endeavours. It provides the formal banking sector in general and
branchless banking sector in particular the much needed capability of tracing the movement of value created in the wake of their financial products’ consumption - a luxury hitherto
available to the middleman financer only, on a localized level. The bottom line would be to operate all transactions through ICT based mobile vaults without the possibility of hard cash entering into the primary and secondary users’ hands with 100% traceability and control on
movement of the capital. Such banking products may bind the users into specific agreements of use of their products, giving flexibility and depth to the proposed product line. It will also
reduce the money drag while creating the wealth through credit transactions. Money tends to bind a certain amount of money while producing wealth though its transactions. Electronic
exchange of money will not express such limitations along conventional barriers, further reducing the overall cost of production.
5.3.2 THE DOCUMENTATION (TRACEABILITY) AND QUALITY ASSURANCE The traceability is of utmost importance for quality assurance. More than anything else, it is responsibility of the state to provide an environment free from exploitation. The existence of
a diseased consumable product is now categorized as the exploitation. Every effort shall be made to make the livestock produce traceable with credible level of documentation and
quality assurance.
5.4 AVAILABILITY OF QUALITY DATA FOR R&D
The ICT intervention of L&DD will provide real time bulk data for major interventions for the livestock sector. The L&DD will develop analyses tools for the interpretation of the data. The Government will provide this data to research institutions as well.
Credible data is a pre-requisite to planning. Hence, L&DD will build standing capacity and
capability to conduct a survey/ census of the livestock in the province through the use of its ICT based platform of 9211 service.
5.5 ACADEMIA - INDUSTRY LINKAGES The policy envisages conscious efforts to develop academia-industry linkages by promoting quality applied research in areas of commercial significance. Universities are being
facilitated to have hands on training at Livestock Experiment Stations/ Farms, of their students, for preparing them to be of practical use for the industry when they graduate.
However, the engagement of academia and industry needs to be more meaningful and deeper. Any move on this count shall have blessings of the Government.
5.6 THE PROCESSING INDUSTRY
Strong links to markets for poor rural producers are essential to increasing livestock production, generating economic growth in rural areas and reducing hunger and poverty.
Improving these links creates a virtuous circle by boosting productivity, increasing incomes and strengthening food security. Better access by small producers to domestic and international markets means that they can reliably sell more produce at higher prices. This in
turn encourages farmers to invest in their own businesses and increase the quantity, quality and diversity of the goods they produce. Safe storage facilities, all-weather roads and
affordable transportation are basic needs. In addition to infrastructure, real time information about market prices and demand is vital for participation in modern value chains. The
processing is the only practical way of storing the highly perishable livestock products. Processing besides financials, depends to a great extent on the cheap availability of relevant
technology and of course economies of scale. The growth of leather processing industry in the country is an example to follow. The basic reason of success is the liquidation of
processed goods in the high-end international market. Here comes the role of trade regimes, particularly the quality standards and industry codes for the export of processed livestock goods. The Government will specially focus in next 10 years for the development of the
processing industry in all fields of livestock with duty/ tax free regime on establishment of processing industry pertaining to livestock in the Punjab, preferably in the South.
Chapter 6
PROSPERITY OF STAKEHOLDERS
6.1. HEALTH, HYGIENE & BETTER ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
The socio-economic uplift of the farmer will help him have better health, hygiene and a better management of the environment. This is directly correlated with other socio-economic
amelioration goals of the Government. Hence, conscious efforts will be made to re-align other development efforts to attain synergic effect. This is creation of a virtuous cycle to reap exponential prosperity.
6.2 ANIMAL WELFARE
Welfare of animal should be an integral part of livestock production system. Compliance of existing laws of the land on animal welfare will be ensured at every stage of value chain
including production, transportation, slaughter, care of draught animal and animal handling. Animal welfare will be included as a compulsory subject in the curricula of animal and
veterinary sciences both for graduation and diploma courses. Research to reduce drudgery of animals will be promoted. Moreover, a special narration will be promoted through Imams of rural mosques to sensitize the farmers on the rights of animals as per religious injunctions.
The definition of animal welfare may be expanded to cover the basic rights of an animal to water, food and reproduction and above all the wages in return of its production. It is
something like monetization of services an animal renders through its lifecycle. Some misconceptions about the animals in masses need to be clarified with reference to the unkind treatment, care in offering them feed and water, handling for breeding and while transporting.
6.3 TRACEABILITY AND DISEASE FREE ZONES The logical corollary of the prevention of disease is to gain access to the high end markets. This is not an easy task, given the non-existence of concept and very little capacity at the moment regarding vaccine production and administration. The recommended strategy tool
will be to follow a phased approach of starting from creating capacity of traceability and disease free zones. The same warrants creation of a vibrant production (of vaccines &
information), administrative, financial and compliance framework. The aim is to make the Punjab disease free in next 10 years, starting from sizable disease free zones in terms of variety of livestock production systems, volume of produce, transportation protocols and
provision of free vaccination for the next 3 years with complete traceability. Luckily an ICT based traceability system has already been developed and being tested by the L&DD in 10
Districts on the animals selected for A.I. It will help bring much needed prosperity up to the primary producer of livestock i.e. the subsistence farmer.
6.4 THE ROLE OF NGOS
The role of good NGOs cannot be ignored. NGOs are more productive replacement of expensive administrative interventions of the government with additional advantage of
flexibility of operations and corrective measures well in time. NGOs like Akhuwat, Brooke, and RSPs, besides many others local and foreign are doing commendable service in their respective areas. They can best become much needed catalyst of socio-economic change and
vehicles of transmission of many desired intervention to the actual target segment without compromising the integrity of intended intervention. The L&DD will further facilitate them
in the propagation and achievement of its proposed policy goals.
6.5 THE EXPECTED GAINS FOR THE ECONOMY
The proposed policy interventions are expected to contribute considerably in the national GDP in coming three years. It is also likely to reduce the unemployment in the rural areas;
economic empowerment of rural women, and is poised to arrest the rising trend of rural to urban migration.
Chapter 7
EXPORTABLE SURPLUSES
7.1. THE HALAL MARKET The Halal market comprises of 1.90 billion consumers across 112 countries around the globe
with an estimated worth of 2.3 trillion US dollars annually. About 70 % of the Muslim population that consume halal meat resides in Middle East and Asia Pacific region, which is
most conveniently accessible from Pakistan. Brazil is main exporter of Halal meat in this Halal market. Turkey and Malaysia are growing as exporter of Halal meat to the market. Punjab has advantage of using pork-free-feed for poultry production and use of hand
slaughtering rather than stunning for meat processing. Going forward, this is going to be an important area for earning foreign exchange and ameliorating the conditions of breeder.
7.2. THE REQUISITE QUANTITY OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS Keeping in view the exportable potential of livestock product, the Government will focus on
capacity building of livestock production and processing industry to generate requisite quantity of exportable surplus. The bottom line is to capture the high end markets in the next
10 years. For future planning the database of animals will be maintained up to the mark for its credible and productive use for the purpose. The Government has directed to conduct a baseline survey for measuring the impact of proposed policy goals and to plan the corrective
measures for attaining the stated objective of exportable surpluses.
7.3. FEEDLOT FATTENING
To exploit full potential of this sector, in production of meat, viable business model in all the regions shall be established to demonstrate the true potential of different breeds and its
economic viability. The male buffalo calves shall get special attention for development to tap their potential for production of Veal. The focus would be on the weaned buffalo calves by introducing premium price for the value gain in the process of development, reducing the
otherwise high mortality rate or premature slaughtering. For sheep/ goat cross with some exotic breeds will be experimented. The premium rates offered for the humped cattle rates to
be exploited for which the country has the best breeds available. The universities engaged in Veterinary education will be bound to operate and maintain one project each at some prominent place to demonstrate its feasibility to attract the investors in this sector. Small
pasteurizing units will be encouraged.
7.4. DAIRY & DIARY PRODUCTS
Dairy and dairy products, particularly of organic production and unique characteristics like
goat, sheep, camel, and high fat content milk of buffalo may fetch good markets if properly marketed after having ensured appropriate processing and packaging regimes. Dairy products like yogurt, Lassi: simple and with flavours have potential of capturing sizable markets.
Certification regimes for processed dairy products like ice cream are relatively easier to obtain as compared with simple liquid milk. Idara-e-kissan model needs to be revived.
7.5. SHEEP & GOAT
Breeding policy for sheep and goat will aim to improve growth, body weight, reproductive efficiency, meat and wool quality and quantity, and to reduce mortality. An area specific approach would be adopted to improve quality and quantity of coarse wool and fine wool.
Main focus will be to produce and distribute good quality rams/ bucks of quality indigenous breeds which can thrive in different agro-climatic conditions.
7.6. CAMEL The camel has huge potential for meat due to various cultural, religious and medicinal
reasons. The recent past witnessed its potential for export of veal. The camel milk is another untapped resource as it could find a local high end market with premium pricing if quality assurance and basic packaging and processing is made possible. The rearing families truly
represent the marginalized segment. A slight boost in the liquidation of produce of camel is destined to end up in huge impact in terms of production and economic uplift of its livestock
production system. This part of the livestock always remained neglected and its production remained retarded as no attention was ever paid for its disease control with research and control of its ecto/ endo-parasites. Through a proper survey a database of all such camel
rearing families and their herds will be developed to provide specific interventions. The vaccination, disease mapping and allied support services shall specially be provided to
encourage its development for the niche market of organically produced milk and meat.
7.7. EQUINES
An important role and contribution by working equine (horse, donkeys and mules) and different kinds of pets in Pakistan cannot be denied. The equine population in the country is 4,75 million: including 0.34 million horses, 4.26 million donkeys, and 0.15 million mules
according to Government of Pakistan, Livestock Census, 2006. In Pakistan, nearly half of the total equine population concentrates in urban and peri-urban areas of the country where the
working equine are used by the equine owning communities as main source of their livelihood in different ways. Similarly, traction support provided by working equine in rural setup for food security and livelihood chain is of significant importance. It is estimated that
over 2 million families or more than 15 million poor people depend on working equine directly or indirectly for their living and economic survival in the country.
The equine population in the Punjab has the potential to generate exportable surplus. The need is to devise special protocols and traceability mechanisms to ensure safe exit to the
intended destinations. The L&DD will have to collaborate with the Brooke and other NGOs working in this field for conducting the survey, making a data base and using the same for
control of their disease along with mapping of their diseases. The owners being the poorest of
the poor would thus be receiving the much needed government attention to ameliorate their conditions.
The influx of development, particularly of industrial and urban nature and rapid change in the
mode of transportation has exposed the equines’ population to retarded growth and neglect. Research on equines is but non-existent. Uses of equine’s remnants like hides of donkeys are but quite in demand in the international market, pushing their population in further pressure.
The Government has decided to create an equine Research/ Experiment Station at one of L&DD farms for devising strategies to benefit from this domain which already has informal
existence.
7.8. EGG & POULTRY The Policy envisages sustainable supply of wholesome poultry meat; eggs and value added products to the local and international markets at competitive prices and aimed at facilitating
and support private sector-led development for sustainable poultry production. The strategy revolves around improving regulatory framework; disease control and genetic improvement in rural poultry; hi-tech poultry production under environmentally - controlled housing;
processing and value addition; Improving bio-security; need based research and development and framers training & education. Poultry sectors growth of 15-20% per annum can be
achieved if bold measures are taken to support the poultry industry in line with competing countries of the region.
7.8.1. THE RURAL POULTRY
The commercial poultry sector is highly organized and vibrant in the private sector. The entire organization of poultry research and production facilities of L&DD is thus being
focused for the development of rural poultry. The backyard rural poultry, which is a scavenger by nature, always remained a major source for provision of protein in the form of
egg and meat to the rural poor, especially the women and children. With the promotion of the organic products, for which the meat and eggs of rural poultry have gained popularity, there remains a high scope of its propagation and economic viability by keeping small units. The
floods, the killing disease of ND and introduction of some non-backyard poultry breeds have played havoc to this sector. It requires urgent replenishment with healthy fully vaccinated
stocks, to reoccupy its due place in the backyard of rural home. The commercial production of rural poultry has potential demand in the Northern KPK and Afghanistan with possibility of fetching handsome price. Facilitation to such poultry producing farms will be encouraged
by the Department. The flood affected areas shall be supplied poultry units as replenishment of the perished flock with subsidy provided by the Punjab Government.
7.8.2. THE COMMERCIAL POULTRY
Poultry sector is one of the important and vibrant segments of livestock sector in Pakistan. This sector has contributed 1.3% in GDP during 2013-14 while its contribution in agriculture
and livestock value-added stood at 6.1% and 10.8%, respectively. Poultry meat contributes
28% of the total meat production in the country. The current investment in poultry industry is estimated at more than PKR 200 billion. Poultry sector has shown a robust growth at 8-10%
per annum, which reflects its inherent potential. The poultry value-added at current factor cost has increased from PKR 121.7 billion (2012-13) to 130.7 billion (2013-14) showing an
increase of 7.4% as compared to previous year. Current turnover of poultry industry in Pakistan is estimated around PKR 732 billion annually. Poultry industry generates employment and provides source of income to more
than 1.5 million people of Pakistan. There are 400 hatcheries, 150 feed mills and about 25000 poultry farms in the country. Breeding stock population is around 12 million and there are 40
million layers. Quail farming is also growing at very fast pace in the country. At present over 40% of agriculture produce and by-products of agriculture are being used in poultry feed.
Poultry meat and egg production has become a key component of national food and nutritional security. Punjab, by virtue of its market size and private sector’s sustained efforts
to establish this vital industry has become a major producer of poultry products in the country despite the fact that it has yet to attain its true potential in poultry production, value addition and exports. To capitalize on this intrinsic potential the government has decided to
make the Punjab a hub of processed chicken for exports. Since poultry inputs like one day old chicks of grandparent flocks are being imported at the moment as government poultry
research institutes could not contribute towards development of the indigenous poultry industry, the sector leaned heavily towards the import of inputs.
Now the production capacity has grown to a scale where the produce has altered dramatically the demand supply equilibrium; the industry is going to face a huge knock out in next 2
years. To address the situation forward planning is of prime importance. Exports are thus the only way out in the projected scenario. For exports to kick start to the critical level of value fetching and overcoming the competition, the cost of production needs to be reduced for
which the inputs of all sorts like, chicks, parent flock, vaccines, medicines, processing machinery, packaging material need to be produced indigenously. The industry demands a
rebate on exports and other similar concessions to beat the competition in the international market as is being provided to such industry in neighbouring countries. The Government will advocate lifting of duty and taxes on all sort of poultry processing machinery; inputs, vaccine
production facilities, and shall offer rebate on the export at rates compatible with the internationally competing players. For indigenous development of above mentioned
capabilities, R&D is imperative. The government is of the opinion to put the private sector in the driving seat in this domain as well. The funding will be provided by the Government taken as a percentage of export rebate given to the exporters and the same shall be used for
the R&D in the very domain of indigenous production of poultry inputs.
7.8.3 THE OSTRICH FARMING
Ostrich farming is among the world's growing agricultural businesses. There are strong, global markets for ostrich meat, eggs, feathers, leather and related products. It is estimated
that ostrich producers are only meeting 10 percent of the consumer demand. This is high time to capture our share in the international market by rearing the Ostrich commercially and launching its by-products i.e. feather, skin (Boots, jackets, hats, and purses are popular items
made of ostrich leather). Apart from introducing these products / by-products in international market, setting up trend for consumption of Ostrich meat locally which is lower in
cholesterol, calories & fat and contains higher quantity of Iron as compared to beef, chicken meat and lamb (mutton) is a point of future concern. In case of Ostrich Feed Conversion
Ratio (FCR) is better than livestock and comparable with poultry. The immune system is much stronger than livestock and poultry. It lays 40 - 100 eggs in a season.
Trend of developing ostrich farming is also gaining popularity in Pakistan recently. At present, there are a few farmers who are rearing ostrich at small scale in different parts of the
country. But there are certain constraints like high early mortality in chicks and difficult marketing, thwarting flourishing of this enterprise.
Punjab is the most suitable place for ostrich farming due to cheap labour, suitable climatic conditions, inexpensive fodder, and low business cost, critical number of businessmen,
farmers and investors that can be involved in this business.
The shifting trends in poultry production regions and resultant closing of small sheds replaced by controlled sheds have rendered the engaged labour jobless. This idle capacity can best be utilized for the purpose.
7.9 THE ROLE OF EXPORTER REDEFINED
The traditional role and importance of exporter is due to the foreign exchange he earns for
the country. Halal market is perhaps the only future market for the livestock of Punjab. However, trust earning is the trick of the trade for procuring the brand value. This market is thus required to be developed with utmost care, professionalism and full government support.
The policy expands the definition of exporter to encompass its role as high value fetcher for the primary producer due to would-be direct vertical links L&DD Department is striving to
develop between the primary producer and the exporter.
7.10 THE INTERNATIONAL TRADE PROTOCOLS
The Punjab government has decided to develop its HR capacity building in the International
Trade Protocols in the context of WTO regime and phyto-sanitary and sanitary products. The requisite exposure will be obtained as a special training and education regarding trade of livestock products. The intended intervention will help gain the intellectual property potential
of the indigenous livestock breeds like Sahiwal cattle, Nili-Ravi buffalo, Mundri sheep, Nuqri/ Beetal goats for their development and export to international genetic markets.
Chapter 8
The Communication Framework
The communication framework of the policy is perhaps the most important area of the policy
intervention that has direct bearing on the successful implementation of the policy aims and objectives for producing the desired results. The same warrants to synthesize the policy into a compact vision and mission statement.
8.1 VISION
Sustainable livestock sector development to ensure food security, enhanced competitiveness, quality life of stakeholders with exportable surpluses.
8.2 MISSION
To attain vision through vibrant and measurable Public Policy stimulation with targeted interventions.
8.3 INSTITUTIONAL PARTICIPATION OF THE PUBLIC IN
GENERATING DYNAMIC KNOWLEDGE BASE
The Government has decided not only to enable the public to speak directly to the internal information system of the L&DD to earn the much needed trust on governance institutions but has extended the concept to enable the public to participate in real time in the policy
formulation process by creating a digital bridge through state of the art Virtual Governance System of 9211. The same will eliminate the extreme wastages in taking corrective measures
well in time. It will also help create a dynamic knowledge bank of information, much needed for public policy formulation. Public access to information is not necessary as public right only, rather it is imperative from the point of view of enlarging the surface area of
governance institutions, with the public to have better understanding of public service delivery needs, in a fast changing world.
8.4. FM RADIO
The use of call center based advisory service will be replaced with FM Radio based advisory service to reach maximum number of people.
8.5 ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORTS SUBMISSION TO THE
PROVINCIAL ASSEMBLY
Livestock and dairy sectors are such important areas of development that they must be at the top of Government’s priority. To further augment the performance mapping of the L&DD Department and its resultant impact on the sector development, it is required that an annual
progress report should be submitted, for review, on the floor of the Provincial Assembly.
Chapter 9
THE POLICY LIFECYCLE
9.1. PLOTTING THE POLICY IN SHORT, MEDIUM AND LONG TERMS
Every policy and product has a lifecycle. So is the present policy on livestock and dairy
development. Plotting the policy objectives along with distinct action areas against a lifecycle
in terms of short, medium and long term will help understand the measuring yardstick with the
help of which progress on the policy could be evaluated. Following grid has been used to
percolate the concept into deliverables.
Sr. No
.
Policy Area Action Area Policy Lifecycle
Short Term 1-2 Years
Medium Term
2-3 Years
Long Term
3- 5 Years
1 Sustainable Livestock Sector
Development
Foundation for sustainable development: alignment
of Institutions along defined roles
2 The Enabling
Infrastructure
The Role of PAMCO
The Role of PLDDB
3 The Governance
Framework- Paradigm Shift from Curative to
Preventive
Mass vaccination of
animals and birds in the province
Vaccine production
Indigenous vaccine production facility
Revamping the list of
Extension Services
3 L&DD as Livestock Asset
Manager
4 The Human Resource
Development
5 Disease Prevention
Disease Surveillance and Forecasting
Animal Husbandry Practices
Deworming
6 Feed & Nutrition Village based profiling of deficiencies of minerals and water
7 Extension
Services
Motor Cycles
Octroi Posts
8 Capacity Building Livestock Production
Systems
Research, Education and Training
The Role of Higher
Education in Livestock Production
Re-discovering the role of L&DD’s Livestock
Experiment Farms
R&D & Intellectual Property Rights
9 Partnerships for
Socio-Economic Change-
Livestock Activists: Women,
Lambardars, Imams Masjids
and Village Students.
10 The Regulatory Framework
Provincial Drug Control & Marketing Facilitation
Authority
Control of Zoonotic Diseases
11 Livestock: Agro
Based Industry
12 Provision of Nutrients &
Minerals
13 Restocking of Rangelands
Mapping of seasonal migration routes of Livestock
The Nomadic Livestock
Clans
Mapping of trade routes of Livestock
14 The issue of price
capping
Price capping by the
Government
Price capping by the unfair market practices
15 The Breeding
Framework
The Progeny Testing
Programme
The Breeding Plan
The Breeding Policy & Rules
Preferred Areas of HR
Development
16 Special Emphasis on the South & Cholistan
17 Managing the Livestock of Tribal Areas’ of
DG Khan & Rajanpur
Warble Fly Control & Eradication Management
18 Conservation of
Animal Bio-Diversity
19 The Trade Protocols of
Livestock & Livestock
Products
The Export Regime Protocols
The Import Regime Protocols
The Quarantine
The transportation Regime Protocols
20 Indigenous
Vaccine Production
21 Disaster
Management Protocols
22 Changing the Service Delivery
Model- the Virtual
Governance
Virtual Communication module- mapping of 9211
system on all Telcos
Virtual AI Module
Virtual Census Module
Virtual Vaccination Module
Virtual Farmers’
Registration Module
Virtual Meat Tag Inquiry and Slaughtering Process
Information Management Module
24/ 7 dedicated
communication & contact center
Virtual Field Services Module
Virtual Performance Monitoring/ evaluation Module
Virtual disease alert &
diagnostics module
Virtual lab test
communication module
Executive Dashboard
Virtual OPD Treatment module
Dynamic USSD capability
for cost effective real time data formation
22.
1
The Information
Dissemination and Vertical Market Linkage
22.
2
The Echo-
Marketing Zoning-
Localized Cattle Bazars
23 Institutional response to the
middleman phenomenon
24 The
Documentation (Tractability) and Quality
Assurance
25 Availability of Quality data for
R&D
26 Academia- Industry Linkages
27 The Processing
Industry
28 Health, Hygiene and Better
Environmental Management
29 Animal Welfare
30 Tractability and Disease Free
Zones
31 The Role of NGOs
32 The Halal Market
33 The Requisite
Quantity of Livestock
Products
34 Feedlot Fattening
35 Dairy & Dairy Products
Collection Chain amelioration
Pasteurizing/ Packing
preferences
Product diversification
36 Sheep & Goat Eradication of Warble Fly & PPR
37 Camel Parasitic Control
Milk Marketing
Mechanism
Veal Formation
38 Equines Research Farming
Trade protocols
39 Egg & Poultry The Rural/ organic Poultry
The Commercial Poultry
42 The International
Trade Protocols
43 Availability of institutional
dynamic information to the Public
44 Policy
Communication Framework
Annual Progress Reports
submission to the Provincial Assembly
FM Radio
Annex-G
Annex-H
Paradigm Shift
Annex-I
Annex-J
Tender Notices
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Annex-K
PDMA Urdu SMS
دریا ے سندھ میں اونچے درجے کا سیالبی ریال گزر رہا ہے ۔ متوقع سیالبی صورت حال
مزید معلومات کے پیش نظر اپنا قیمتی سامان اور مال مویشی محفوظ مقام پر منتقل کر لیں۔
پر رابطہ کریں۔ 1129کی ہیلپ الئن PDMA/AC/DCOکے لئے متعلقہ
بذریعہ محکمہ الئیوسٹاک
ھزار کیوسک کا سیالبی ریال ۵۵اگست کودریائے ستلج میں گنڈا سنگھ کے مقام پر تقریبا ۱۳
ضلع قصور کی حدود سے داخل ھوگا جوکے ضلع اوکاڑھ ۔ پاکپتن ۔ بھاولنگر ۔وھاڑی اور
وگ محفوظ مقامات پر منتقل ھو جایئں۔بھاولپور سے گذرے گا۔ نشیبی عالقوں کے ل
بذریعہ محکمہ الئیوسٹاک
اگرآپکے مویشیوں کو حفاظتی ٹیکہ جات نہ لگے ہیں یا انکی بیماری کی
پررابطہ کریں۔080009211صورت میں متعلقہ ویٹرنری ڈاکٹر یا ٹال فری نمبر
پنجابمحکمہ الئیوسٹاک حکومت
اداراجات کوگوشت کی سپالئی صرف تصدیق شدہ ایس۔ایم۔ایس والےٹیگ
سےیقینی بنائیں۔محکمہ الئیوسٹاک پنجاب
گلگھوٹوانتڑیوں کازہررانی کھیت مفت ٹیکےٹیسٹ محکمہ
080009211الئیوسٹاک
مال، خرید و فروخت، سٹاک ممنوع ہے۔ اپنے ) بوسٹن اور سوماٹیک ہارمون ٹیکہ کا استع
عالقہ میں ویٹرنری اسٹور اور فروخت کنئدگان، استعمال کنئدگان کی فوری نشاندہی ڈسٹرکٹ
پنجاب –الیوسٹاک آفیسر کو کریں۔ نسیم صادق (سیکریٹری الئیو سٹاک
کان پر خوشخبری رجسٹریشن سرٹیفیکیٹ کا اجرا شروع کر دیا گیا ے۔ جلد ہی آپ کی دو
پر رابطہ کریں محکمہ الئیو 08000-9211آویزاں ہوگا۔ . مزید معلومات کیلیے ٹال فری نمبر
سٹاک پنجاب
خبردار ! ویہڑیوں / جھوٹیوں و بھیر/ بکریوں)پٹھوں( قابل افزائش مادہ جانوروں کں فروخت
تا ہے ذبح کرنا ممنوع ھے قانون کں خالف ورزی پر آپ کا جانور بحق سرکاد ضبط ھو سک
پر رابطہ کریں. محکمہ الیو سٹاک 080009211 مزید تفصیالت کے لیے ٹال فری نمبر
.حکومت پنجاب
تک 10-07-2015محترم آپ کی گوشت کی دوکان/کاروبار کی رجسٹریشن بعدازتکمیل
پر 08000-9211ٹال فری نمبر آپکوارسال کر دی جاے گی۔شکریہ۔ مزید معلومات کیلیے
۔رابطہ کریں۔محکمہ الئیو سٹاک پنجاب
Annex-L
List of 296 Lab Tests
TestCode
Sample Type
Description of Test
Result Animals Slang/Vern
acular Names
PostiveResultCod
e
Disease
DiseaseNameEnglish
DiseaseNameU
rdu
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Cestodes (Tape Worm)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko malap ke bemari
R011 Helmin
ths
janwar ko
malap ke
bemari hia
جانور کو
ملپ کی
بیماری
ہے
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Nematodes (Round Worm)
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
mede aur antaryon
ke kere hn
R012 Helmin
ths
janwar ko
mede
aur antaryo
n ke kere hn
جانور کو
معدے اور
انتڑیوں
کے کیڑے
ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation &
Sedimentaion (Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Trematodes (Liver Flukes)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko Jigar ke kere hn
R013 Helmin
ths
janwar ko Jigar ke kere
hn
جانور کو
جگر کے
کیڑے ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation &
Sedimentaion (Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Trematodes (Blood Flukes)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko Khun ke kere hn
R0131
Helminths
janwar ko Khun ke kere
hn
جانور کو
کے خون
کیڑے ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Trematodes (Stomach
Flukes)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko Mede ke kere hn
R0132
Helminths
janwar ko
Mede ke kere
hn
جانور کو
معدے کے
کیڑے ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Eimeria (Coccidia)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko antaryon
ke kere hn
R0133
Helminths
janwar ko
antaryon ke
kere hn
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کے کیڑے
ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Negative
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko Koi kere nahi hn
R010 Helmin
ths
janwar ko Koi kere
nahi hn
جانور
کوکوئی
کیڑے
نہیں ہیں
LT01 Faecal Sample
Flotation & Sedimentaion
(Faecal Sample)
(Helminths)
Mixed worm Infection
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko Mile jule
pet ke kere
R0134
Helminths
janwar ko Mile jule pet
ke kere
جانور کو
ملے جلے
پیٹ کے
کیڑے
LT02 Faecal Sample
McMaster Egg Counting
Techniques
Egg count Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
Keeron ke Andon ke tadad jo
R0135
Keeron
ke Andon
کیڑوں
کے انڈوں
کی تعداد
(Faecal) el and Others kable zikr ha
ke tadad jo
kable zikr ha
جو قابلے
زکر ہے
LT02 Faecal Sample
McMaster Egg
Counting Techniques
(Faecal)
Egg Count
Non-Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Keeron ke Andon ke
tadad jo kable zikr
nhi ha
R0136
Keeron ke
Andon
ke tadad jo
kable zikr nhi
ha
کیڑوں
کے انڈوں
کی تعداد
جو قابلے
زکر نہیں
ہے
LT04 Faecal Sample
Culture Test (Faecal) (Johnes
Disease)
Positive for growth of
Mycobacterium
Paratuberculosis
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko mok ka purana
marz ha
R0137
Johnes Diseas
e
janwar ko mok
ka
purana marz ha
جانور کو
موک کا
پرانا
مرض ہے
LT04 Faecal Sample
Culture Test
(Faecal) (Johnes
Disease)
Negative for growth of
Mycobacterium
Paratubercluosis
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
mok ka purana
marz nhi ha
R0138
Johnes
Disease
janwar ko mok
ka purana
marz nhi ha
جانور کو
موک کا
پرانا
مرض
نہیں ہے
LT05 Faecal Sample
Staining with ZN Stain (
Faecal)
(Johnes Disease)
-ve for Acid-Fast Bacil l i
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar me
mok ke purana marz ke
jarasim maujud nhi
ha
R0139
Johnes Diseas
e
janwar
me mok ke
purana marz ke
jarasim maujud nhi ha
جانور
میں موک
کے
پرانے
مرض کے
جراثیم
موجود
نہیں ہے
LT05 Faecal Sample
Staining with ZN Stain (
Faecal) (Johnes
Disease)
+ve for Acid-Fast Bacil l i
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko
mok ke purane marz ke
jarasim maujud ha
R0327
Johnes Diseas
e
janwar ko mok
ke purane marz ke
jarasim maujud
ha
جانور میں
موک کے
پرانے
مرض کے
جراثیم
موجود ہے
LT07 Milk
Sample
Culture Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
-ve for
Bacterial Growth
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
doodh me
saroo ke jarasim nhi
hn
R0330
Mastitis
doodh me
saroo ke
jarasim nhi hn
دودھ میں
ساڑو کے
جراثیم
موجود
نہیں ہیں
LT07 Milk
Sample
Culture Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
+ve for Bacterial Growth
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
doodh me saroo ke
jarasim hn
R0331
Mastitis
doodh
me saroo
ke jarasim
hn
دودھ میں
ساڑو کے
جراثیم
موجود ہیں
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) Gentamycin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Gentamycin muasar
ha
R0332
Mastitis
Gentamycin
muasar
جینٹامایسن
موثر ہے
(Mastitis) ha
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
Tetracycline
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Tetracyclin
e muasar ha
R033
3
Mastiti
s
Tetracycline
muasar ha
ٹیٹراسائی
کلین موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk)
(Mastitis)
Enrofloxacin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
enrofloxacin muasar
ha
R0334
Mastitis
enrofloxacin
muasar
ha
انروفلوک
ساسین
موثر ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk)
(Mastitis)
Nor floxacin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Norfloxacin muasar ha
R0335
Mastitis
Norfloxacin
muasar
ha
نورفلوکسا
سین موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug
Sensitivity Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
Ciprofloxacin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Ciprofloxacin muasar
ha
R0336
Mastitis
Ciproflo
xacin muasar
ha
سپروفلوک
ساسین
موثر ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug
Sensitivity Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
Chloramphenicol
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Chloramph
enicol muasar ha
R0337
Mastitis
Chlorampheni
col muasar
ha
کلوروفینی
کول موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug
Sensitivity Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
Kanamycin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Kanamycin muasar ha
R0338
Mastitis
Kanamy
cin muasar
ha
کینامائیسی
ن موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
Doxycyclin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doxycyclin
muasar ha
R033
9
Mastiti
s
Doxycyclin
muasar ha
ڈوکساسائ
یلین موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk)
(Mastitis)
Penicil l in Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Penicil l in muasar ha
R0340
Mastitis
Penicil l in
muasar
ha
پینیسلین
موثر ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
Ampicil l in Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Ampicil l in muasar ha
R0341
Mastitis
Ampicil lin
muasar ha
ایمپیسیلین
موثر ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug
Sensitivity Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
Amoxicil l in
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Amoxicil l in muasar ha
R0342
Mastitis
Amoxici
l l in muasar
ha
اموکساسی
لین موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug
Sensitivity Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
Co trimoxazole
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Co
trimazole muasar ha
R0343
Mastitis
Co trimazol
e muasar
ha
کوٹریمازو
ل موثر
ہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
Trimethoprim
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Trimethopr
im muasar ha
R034
4
Mastiti
s
Trimethoprim
muasar ha
ٹرائیمیتھوپ
رم
موثرہے
LT08 Milk
Sample
Drug Sensitivity Test
(Milk) Others
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Dawai muasar ha
R0345
Mastitis
Dawai muasar
ha
دوائی
موثرھے
(Mastitis)
LT09 Milk
Sample
Milk Ring Test
(Milk) (Brucellosis)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Phal sutna
ke bemari nhi ha
R035
0
Brucell
osis
Phal sutna ke
bemari nhi ha
پھل ستنا
کی
بیماری
ھے
LT09 Milk
Sample
Milk Ring Test
(Milk) (Brucellosis)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
phal sutna me milk
ring test muasar ha
R035
1
Brucell
osis
phal sutna
me milk
ring test muasar
ha
پھل ستنا
میں ملک
رینگ
ٹیسٹ
موثر ھے
LT10 Milk
Sample
White Side Test (Milk) (Mastitis)
-ve Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
saroo me
white side test
muasar nhi ha
R0346
Mastitis
saroo
me white
side test muasar
nhi ha
سروو میں
وائٹ سائیڈ
ٹیسٹ
موثر نھیں
ھے
LT10 Milk
Sample
White Side Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
+ve Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
saroo me white side
test
muasar ha
R0347
Mastitis
saroo me
white side test
muasar ha
سروو میں
وائٹ سائیڈ
ٹیسٹ
موثر ھے
LT11 Milk
Sample
Formaline
(Milk) (Adulteration)
Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza shamil hn
R0352
Adulteration
Doodh me
muzar e
sehat ajza
shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Formaline (Milk)
(Adulteration)
non significant Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza
shamil hn
R0353
Adulteration
Doodh
me muzar e
sehat
ajza shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample Surf (Milk)
(Adulteration) Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza shamil hn
R0354
Adulteration
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza
shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Surf (Milk)
(Adulteration) non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza shamil hn
R035
5
Adulte
ration
Doodh me
muzar e sehat
ajza shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Whey Powder
(Milk) (Adulteration)
Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza
R035
6
Adulte
ration
Doodh
me muzar e
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
shamil hn sehat ajza
shamil hn
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Whey Powder
(Milk) (Adulteration)
non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Camel
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza shamil hn
R035
7
Adulte
ration
Doodh me
muzar e
sehat ajza
shamil hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Vegitable Oil (Milk)
(Adulteration) Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza
shamil hn
R0358
Adulteration
Doodh
me muzar e
sehat ajza
shamil hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Vegitable Oil (Milk)
(Adulteration) non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza shamil hn
R0359
Adulteration
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza
shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample
Starch (Milk)
(Adulteration) Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza shamil hn
R036
0
Adulte
ration
Doodh me
muzar e sehat
ajza shamil
hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT11 Milk
Sample Starch (Milk)
(Adulteration) non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
Doodh me muzar e
sehat ajza shamil hn
R0361
Adulteration
Doodh me
muzar e sehat ajza
shamil hn
دودھ میں
مضرصح
ت اجزاء
شامل ھیں
LT12 Serum
Sample
Rose Bengal
Plate Test (Serum)
(Brucellosis)
positive
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Equine,Camel and
Others
Phal sutne
ke liye rose bengal test muasar ha
R0362
Brucellosis
Phal sutne
ke liye
rose bengal
test muasar
ha
پھل ُ
سٹنے کے
لیےروزب
نگال
ٹیسٹ
موثر ھے
LT12 Serum
Sample
Rose Bengal Plate Test
(Serum) (Brucellosis)
negative
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Equi
ne,Camel and Others
phal sutne ke liye rose
bengal test gher
muasar ha
R036
3
Brucell
osis
phal sutne
ke liye rose
bengal test gher
muasar
پھل ُ
سٹنے کے
لیےروزب
نگال
ٹیسٹ غیر
موثر ھے
ha
LT13 Serum
Sample
Serum Agglutination test (Serum)
(Brucellosis)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Equine,Camel and
Others
Phal sutne
me serum agglutinati
on test
gher muasar ha
R0364
Brucellosis
Phal sutne
me
serum agglutin
ation
test gher
muasar ha
پھل سٹنے
کے لیے
سیرم
اگلوٹیشن
ٹیسٹ غیر
موثر ھے
LT13 Serum
Sample
Serum Agglutination
test (Serum) (Brucellosis)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Equi
ne,Camel and Others
Phal sutne me serum
agglutinati
on test muasar ha
R036
5
Brucell
osis
Phal
sutne me
serum agglutin
ation test
muasar
ha
پھل سٹنے
کے لیے
سیرم
اگلوٹیشن
ٹیسٹ
ھےمیسر
LT14 Serum
Sample
AGID (Serum) (Equine
Infectious Anaemia)
-ve Equine
ghore men khoon ke
kami ke lye AGID gher muasar ha
R036
6
Equine Infecti
ous Anaem
ia
ghore
men khoon
ke kami
ke lye AGID gher
muasar
ha
گھوڑے
میں خون
کی کمی
کے لیے
AGID
غیر موثر
ھے
LT14 Serum
Sample
AGID (Serum) (Equine
Infectious Anaemia)
+ve Equine
ghore men khoon ke
kami ke lye AGID
muasar ha
R036
7
Equine Infecti
ous Anaem
ia
ghore men
khoon ke kami
ke lye AGID
muasar
ha
گھوڑے
میں خون
کی کمی
کے لیے
AGID
موثر ھے
LT10
6
Serum
Sample
AGID (Serum) (Avian
Influenza)
+ve Poultry
murghion men nazla zukam ke
lye AGID muasar ha
R036
8
Avian Influen
za
murghio
n men nazla
zukam
ke lye AGID
muasar ha
مرغوں
میں نزلہ
زکام کے
لیے
AGID
موثر ھے
LT106
Serum Sample
AGID (Serum) (Avian
Influenza)
-ve Poultry
murghion men nazla zukam ke lye AGID
gher muasar ha
R0369
Avian Influen
za
murghio
n men nazla
zukam ke lye
AGID gher
muasar
مرغوں
میں نزلہ
زکام کے
لیے
AGID
غیر موثر
ھے
ha
LT107
Serum Sample
AGID (Serum) (Gumboro)
+ve Poultry
murghion men
gamboro ke lye AGID muasar ha
R0370
Gumboro
murghion men
gambor
o ke lye AGID
muasar
ha
مرغوں
میں
گمبورو
کے لیے
AGID
غیر موثر
ھے
LT107
Serum Sample
AGID (Serum) (Gumboro)
-ve Poultry
murghion men
gamboro ke lye AGID
muasar nhi ha
R0371
Gumboro
murghio
n men gamboro ke lye
AGID muasar nhi ha
مرغوں
میں
گمبورو
کے لیے
AGID
موثرنہیں
ھے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
Normal calcium
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
normal calcium ha
R0372
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constit
uents
normal calcium
ha
نارمل
کیلشیئم
ھے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Low calcium
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
low
calcium ha
R037
3
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
low calcium
ha
لوء
کئیلشیئم
ھے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
High calcium
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
high calcium ha
R0374
Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents
high calcium
ha
ہائی
کیلشیئم
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
Normal Magnesium
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
normal
magnesium ha
R0375
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constituents
normal
magnesium ha
نارمل
میگنیشیئم
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Low Magnesium
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
low magnesium
ha
R0376
Blood Deficiency for various
Constituents
low magnesi
um ha
لوء
میگنیشیئم
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis
High Magnesium
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Cam
high magnesium
ha
R0377
Blood Deficie
ncy for
high magnesi
um ha
ہائی
میگنیشیئم
ہے
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
el and Others various Constit
uents
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Normal
Phosphorus
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
normal
phosphorus ha
R037
8
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
normal
phosphorus ha
نارمل
فاسفورس
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Low Phosphorus
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
low phosphoru
s ha
R0379
Blood Deficiency for various
Constituents
low phosphorus ha
لوء
فاسفورس
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
High phosphorus
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
high phosphoru
s ha
R0380
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constituents
high phosphorus ha
ہائی
فاسفورس
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Normal
Glucose
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
normal
glucose ha
R038
1
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
normal glucose
ha
نارمل
گلوکوز
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Low Glucose
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
low glucose ha
R0382
Blood
Deficiency for various Constit
uents
low glucose
ha
لوء
گلوکوز
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
High Glucose
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
high
glucose ha
R038
3
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
high
glucose ha
ہائی
گلوکوز
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Normal Creatinie
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
normal creatinine
ha
R0384
Blood Deficiency for various
Constituents
normal creatini
ne ha
نارمل
کریٹینن
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
Low Creatinine
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
low creatinine
ha
R0385
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constit
uents
low creatini
ne ha
لوء
کریٹینن
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
High creatinin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
high creatinine
ha
R038
6
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
high creatini
ne ha
ہائی
کریٹینن
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Normal AST
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
normal AST ha
R0387
Blood
Deficiency for various Constit
uents
normal AST ha
نارمل اے
ایس ٹی
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Low AST
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
low AST ha R038
8
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
low AST
ha
لواے ایس
ٹی ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
High AST
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
high AST ha R038
9
Blood Deficiency for various
Constituents
high AST ha
ہائی اے
ایس ٹی
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
Normal ALT
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
normal ALT ha
R0390
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constit
uents
normal ALT ha
نارمل اے
ایل ٹی ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Low ALT
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Low ALT ha R039
1
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
Low ALT
ha
لواے ایل
ٹی ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
High ALT
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
high ALT ha R039
2
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constit
uents
high ALT ha
ہائی اے
ایل ٹی ہے
Constituents)
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
Normal SGOT
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
normal SGOT ha
R0393
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constituents
normal
SGOT ha
نارمل ایس
جی او ٹی
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Low SGOT
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Low SGOT ha
R0394
Blood Deficiency for various
Constituents
Low SGOT
ha
لو ایس
جی او ٹی
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry
Analysis (Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
High SGOT
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
High SGOT ha
R0395
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constit
uents
High SGOT
ha
ہائی ایس
جی او ٹی
ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents)
Normal
Bil irubin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
normal
Bil irubin ha
R039
6
Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents
normal Bil irubin
ha
نارمل بلی
روبن ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood
Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various Constituents)
Low Bilirubin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Low Bilirubin ha
R0397
Blood
Deficiency for various
Constituents
Low Bilirubin
ha
کم بلی
روبن ہے
LT15 Serum
Sample
Blood Chemistry Analysis
(Serum) (Blood Deficiency for
various
Constituents)
High Bilirubin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
High Bilirubin ha
R0398
Blood Deficie
ncy for various Constituents
High
Bilirubin ha
ہائی بلی
روبن ہے
LT16 Whole Blood
Culture Test (Whole Blood)
(HS)
+ve for Pasterulla
Cattle,Buffalo Gal ghotu ke bemari
ha
R0427
HS
Gal
ghotu ke
bemari
ha
گل گوٹو
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT16 Whole Blood
Culture Test (Whole Blood)
(HS)
-ve for Pasterulla
Cattle,Buffalo Gal ghotu ke bemari
nhi ha
R0428
HS
Gal ghotu
ke bemari
nhi ha
گل گوٹو
کی بیمار
ینہیں ہے
LT16 Whole
Blood
Culture Test (Whole Blood)
(BQ)
+ve for
Clostridia Cattle,Buffalo
chore mar ke bemari
ha
R042
9 BQ
chore mar ke
bemari ha
چوڑے
مار کئ
ببعماری
ہے
LT16 Whole Blood
Culture Test (Whole Blood)
(BQ)
-ve for Clostridia
Cattle,Buffalo chore mar ke bemari
nhi ha
R0430
BQ
chore mar ke bemari
nhi ha
چوڑے
مار کئ
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT17 Whole Blood
Gram Staining (Whole Blood)
(BQ)
+ve for Clostridia
Cattle,Buffalo chore mar ke bemari
ha
R0431
BQ
chore mar ke bemari
ha
چوڑے
مار کئ
ببعماری
ہے
LT17 Whole Blood
Gram Staining
(Whole Blood) (BQ)
-ve for Clostridia
Cattle,Buffalo
chore mar
ke bemari nhi ha
R0432
BQ
chore
mar ke bemari nhi ha
چوڑے
مار کئ
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT10
8
Whole
Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (HS)
+ve for
Bipolar Parterulla
Cattle,Buffalo
Gal ghotu
ke bemari ha
R043
3 HS
Gal ghotu
ke bemari
ha
گل گوٹو
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT108
Whole Blood
Geimsa's
Staining (Whole Blood)
(HS)
-ve for Bipolar Parterulla
Cattle,Buffalo
Gal ghotu
ke bemari nhi ha
R0434
HS
Gal ghotu
ke bemari nhi ha
گل گوٹو
کی بیمار
ینہیں ہے
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Theileria)
+ve for Theileria Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko khoon ke
tufail i karam ha
R0435
Theileria
Janwar ko
khoon ke
tufail i
karam ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ہے
LT19 Whole
Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Theileria)
-ve for
Theileria Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko khoon ke
tufail i karam nhi
ha
R043
6
Theiler
ia
Janwar ko
khoon
ke tufail i karam nhi ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ینہیں ہے
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood)
(Babesia)
+ve for Babesia Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko khoon ke
tufail i
karam ha
R0437
Babesia
Janwar
ko khoon
ke tufail i
karam ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ہے
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's
Staining (Whole Blood)
(Babesia)
-ve for Babesia Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
khoon ke tufail i
karam nhi ha
R0438
Babesia
Janwar ko
khoon ke
tufail i karam
nhi ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ینہیں ہے
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's
Staining (Whole Blood) (Anaplasma)
+ve for Anaplasma
Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
khoon ke tufail i
karam ha
R0439
Anaplasma
Janwar ko
khoon ke
tufail i karam
ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ہے
LT19 Whole
Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Anaplasma)
-ve for Anaplasma
Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko khoon ke
tufail i
karam nhi ha
R044
0
Anapla
sma
Janwar ko
khoon ke
tufail i karam nhi ha
جانور کو
خون کی
تئفالی کرم
ینہیں ہے
LT19 Whole
Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Trypanosoma)
+ve for
Trypanosoma Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko surra ka
tufali karam
R044
1
Trypan
osoma
janwar ko surra
ka tufali karam
جانوار
کو خون
کا تئفالی
کارام
LT19 Whole
Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Trypanosoma)
-ve for
Trypanosoma Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko surra ka
tufali nhi karam
R044
2
Trypan
osoma
janwar ko surra
ka tufali nhi
karam
جانوار
کو خون
کا تئفالی
کرم ینہیں
ہے
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's
Staining (Whole Blood)
(Filaria)
+ve for Filaria Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
khoon ka karam ha
R0443
Filaria
janwar ko
khoon ka
karam ha
جانوار
کو خون
کا تئفالی
کارام
LT19 Whole Blood
Geimsa's Staining
(Whole Blood) (Filaria)
-ve for Filaria Spp.
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko khoon ka
karam nhi ha
R0444
Filaria
janwar
ko khoon
ka karam
nhi ha
جانوار
کو خون
کا تئفالی
کرم ینہیں
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
HB Levels increased
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko khoon ke
zyadati ha
R0447
Blood Picture
janwar ko
khoon ke
zyadati ha
جانوار
کو خونکی
زیادتی ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
HB Levels
normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R044
8
Blood
Picture
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
HB Levels decreased
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko khoon ke
kami ha
R0449
Blood Picture
janwar ko
khoon
ke kami ha
جانور کو
خون کی
کامی ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Lymphocyte Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R0450
Blood Picture
janwar ka
khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Lymphocytes
(Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar
bemar ha
R045
1
Blood
Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Lymphocytes (Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0452
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Monocytes (Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0453
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole
Blood) (Blood Picture)
Monocyte Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
R0454
Blood Picture
janwar
ka khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Monocytes
(Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar
bemar ha
R045
5
Blood
Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Eosinophils (Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0456
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Eosinophils Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R0457
Blood Picture
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Eosinophils (Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0458
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole
Blood) (Blood Picture)
Basophils
(Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar
bemar ha
R045
9
Blood
Picture
janwar
bemar ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Basophils Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R0460
Blood Picture
janwar ka
khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Basophils (Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0461
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Platelets (Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0462
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole
Blood) (Blood Picture)
Platelets Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
R0463
Blood Picture
janwar
ka khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
Platelets (Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Cam
janwar bemar ha
R0464
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
el and Others
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole
Blood) (Blood Picture)
PCV (Decreased)
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
khoon ke
kami wala virus
R0465
Blood Picture
khoon
ke kami wala virus
جانور کو
خون کی
کامی
واال
وائرس
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
PCV Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R0466
Blood Picture
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
PCV (Increased)
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
khoon ke kami wala
virus
R0467
Blood Picture
khoon ke kami
wala
virus
جانور کو
خون کی
کامی
واال
وائرس
ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
WBC Increased
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar
bemar ha
R046
8
Blood
Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
WBC Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ka khoon thek
ha
R0469
Blood Picture
janwar ka
khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
WBC Decreased
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar bemar ha
R0470
Blood Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture) RBC Increased
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko khoon ke kami ha
R0471
Blood Picture
Janwar
ko khoon
ke kami ha
جانور کو
خون کی
کامی ہے
LT22 Whole Blood
CBC (Whole
Blood) (Blood Picture)
RBC Levels normal
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ka
khoon thek ha
R0472
Blood Picture
janwar
ka khoon
thek ha
جانور کو
خون
ٹھیک
ہے
LT22 Whole
Blood
CBC (Whole Blood) (Blood
Picture)
RBC Decreased
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar
bemar ha
R047
3
Blood
Picture
janwar bemar
ha
جانور
بیمار ہے
LT23 Morbid Sample
ELISA (Morbid Material)
(PPR) +ve for PPR Sheep,Goat
Kata ke bemari ha
R0474
PPR Kata ke bemari
ha
کاتا کی
بیمار ہے
LT23 Morbid
Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (PPR)
-ve for PPR Sheep,Goat
Kata ke
bemari nhi ha
R047
5 PPR
Kata ke
bemari nhi ha
کاتا کی
بیمارینہیں
ہے
LT23 Morbid
Sample
ELISA (Morbid Material)
(FMD Type A)
+ve for Sero Type "A" FMD
Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko mon khur
ke bemari ha
R047
6
FMD
Type A
Janwar ko mon khur ke
bemari ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ہے
LT23 Morbid
Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (FMD Type A)
-ve for Sero
Type "A" FMD Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko mon khur
ke bemari nhi ha
R047
7
FMD
Type A
Janwar ko mon
khur ke bemari nhi ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ینہیں
ہے
LT23 Morbid
Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (FMD Type O)
+ve for Sero
Type "O" FMD Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko mon khur
ke bemari ha
R047
8
FMD
Type O
Janwar ko mon
khur ke bemari
ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ہے
LT23 Morbid Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (FMD Type O)
-ve for Sero
Type "O" FMD Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
mon khur ke bemari
nhi ha
R0479
FMD Type O
Janwar ko mon
khur ke bemari nhi ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ینہیں
ہے
LT23 Morbid Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (FMD Type
Asia 1)
+ve for Sero
Type "Asia-1" FMD
Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
mon khur ke bemari
ha
R0480
FMD
Type Asia 1
Janwar ko mon
khur ke bemari
ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ہے
LT23 Morbid Sample
ELISA (Morbid
Material) (FMD Type
Asia 1)
-ve for Sero
Type "Asia-1" FMD
Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
mon khur ke bemari
nhi ha
R0481
FMD
Type Asia 1
Janwar ko mon
khur ke bemari nhi ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ینہیں
ہے
LT105
Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material) (HS)
-ve for Pasteurella
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko Gal ghotu ke bemari
nhi ha
R0482
HS
Janwar
ko Gal ghotu
ke bemari
nhi ha
گل گوٹو
کی بیمار
ینہیں ہے
LT105
Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material) (HS)
+ve for Pasteurella
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko Gal ghotu ke bemari
ha
R0483
HS
Janwar ko Gal ghotu
ke
bemari ha
گل گوٹو
کی بیمار
ہے
LT25 Skin Intradermal Tuberculin
Test (Skin) (TB)
+ve for TB
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko tab dik ke
bimari ha
R054
4 TB
janwar ko tab dik ke
bimari ha
جانور کو
تپ دق کی
بیمار ہے
LT25 Skin Intradermal Tuberculin
Test (Skin) (TB)
-ve for TB
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko tab dik ke
bimari nhi ha
R054
5 TB
janwar ko tab dik ke
bimari nhi ha
جانور کو
تپ دق کی
بیمار ینہیں
ہے
LT27 Milk
Sample
ELISA (Milk) (Mycotoxicosis
) significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
doodh men
phaphundi ke zehrele made hn
R0328
Mycotoxicosi
s
doodh men
phaphundi ke
zehrele made
hn
دودھ میں
پھاپھئندی
کی
زھرلئ
مادع ہے
LT27 Milk
Sample
ELISA (Milk) (Mycotoxicosis
) non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
doodh men
phaphundi ka kable zikr na hona
R0329
Mycotoxicosi
s
doodh men
phaphundi ka kable
zikr na
hona
میں دودھ
پھاپھئندی
کی
زھرلئ
مادع ینہیں
ہے
LT28 Milk
Sample
Surf Field Mastitis Test
(Milk) (Mastitis)
-ve Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
saroo me surf field
test gher muasar ha
R034
8
Mastiti
s
saroo me surf
field test
gher muasar
ha
سروو میں
سئرف
تعست
گھعر
موثر ہے
LT28 Milk
Sample
Surf Field
Mastitis Test (Milk)
(Mastitis)
positive Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Cam
el
saroo me
surf field test
muasar ha
R0349
Mastitis
saroo me surf
field test
muasar
ha
سروو میں
سئرف
تعست
موثر ہے
LT29 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(ND) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
rani khet ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat
thek ha
R0399
ND
rani khet ke
lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek
ha
رانی
کھعت کے
جئوات ع
مئدافیات
ٹھیک ہے
LT29 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(ND) Low antibody
titre Poultry
rani khet ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek nhi ha
R0400
ND
rani khet ke
lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
رانی
کھعت کے
جئوات ع
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ینہیں ہے
LT30 Serum
Sample
ELISA (Serum)
(IB)
Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi khansi ke
lye kuwat e mudafiat thek ha
R040
1 IB
mutadi khansi ke lye
kuwat e mudafia
t thek ha
مئتادی
کھانسی
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ہے
LT30 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(IB) Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi khansi ke
lye kuwat e mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R0402
IB
mutadi
khansi ke lye
kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
مئتادی
کھانسی
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ینہیں ہے
LT31 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(AI) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R0403
AI
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek
مئتادی
نازال
زئکام کے
لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک ہے
ha
LT31 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(AI) Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R0404
AI
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
مئتادی
نازال
زئکام کے
لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ینہیں ہے
LT32 Serum
Sample
ELISA (Serum)
(IBD)
Normal Ab
titer Poultry
Gumboro ke liye kuwate
mudafiat thek ha
R040
5 IBD
Gumboro ke liye kuwate
mudafiat thek
ha
گئمبہرہ
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک ہے
LT32 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(IBD) Low antibody
titre Poultry
Gumboro ke liye
kuwate mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R0406
IBD
Gumboro ke liye
kuwate mudafia
t thek nhi ha
گئمبہرہ
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ینہیں ہے
LT33 Serum
Sample
ELISA (Serum)
(MG)
Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi saans ke
bemari ke
l ie kuwate mudafiat thek ha
R040
7 MG
mutadi
saans ke
bemari ke l ie
kuwate mudafia
t thek
ha
مئتادی
ساانس
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک ہے
LT33 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(MG) Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi saans ke
bemari ke l ie kuwate mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R0408
MG
mutadi saans
ke bemari
ke l ie kuwate
mudafiat thek
nhi ha
مئتادی
ساانس
کے لیے
جئوات
مئدافیات
ٹھیک
ینہیں ہے
LT34 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(CIAV) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
khoon ke kami wala
virus ke kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R0409
CIAV
khoon ke kami
wala
virus ke kuwat e mudafia
t thek
ha
خون کی
کمی واال
وائرس کی
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT34 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(CIAV) Low antibody
titre Poultry
murghion
me khoon ke kami
wala virus
ke kuwat e mudafiat
R0410
CIAV
murghio
n me khoon
ke kami
wala virus ke
مرغیوں
میں خون
کی کمی
واال
وائرس کی
قوت
مدافیت
thek nhi ha kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT35 Serum
Sample ELISA (Serum)
(SHS) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
murghion me sar ka
bara hona ke khilaf kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R0411
SHS
murghion me
sar ka
bara hona ke
khilaf kuwat e
mudafiat thek
ha
مرغیوں
میں سرکا
بڑا ہونے
کے خالف
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT35 Serum
Sample
ELISA (Serum)
(SHS)
Low antibody
titre Poultry
murghion me sar ka bara hona ke khilaf
kuwat e mudafiat thek ha
R041
2 SHS
murghion me
sar ka bara
hona ke
khilaf kuwat e mudafia
t thek
ha
مرغیوں
میں سرکا
بڑا ہونے
کے خالف
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT36 Serum
Sample
HA&HI
(Serum) (ND)
Normal Ab
titer Poultry
rani khet ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R041
3 ND
rani khet ke
lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek
ha
رانی
کھیت کے
لیے قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT36 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (ND) Low antibody
titre Poultry
rani khet ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek nhi ha
R0414
ND
rani
khet ke lye
kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
رانی
کھیت کے
لیے قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT37 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH5) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R0415
AIH5
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek
ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT37 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH5) Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek nhi ha
R0416
AIH5
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek
nhi ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT38 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH7) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi
nazla zukam ke
lye kuwat e mudafiat
thek ha
R0417
AIH7
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye
kuwat e mudafia
t thek ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT38 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH7) Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R0418
AIH7
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek nhi ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT39 Serum
Sample HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH9) Normal Ab
titer Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye kuwat e
mudafiat thek ha
R0419
AIH9
mutadi nazla
zukam
ke lye kuwat e mudafia
t thek
ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک ہے
LT39 Serum
Sample
HA&HI
(Serum) (AIH9)
Low antibody
titre Poultry
mutadi nazla
zukam ke
lye kuwat e mudafiat
thek nhi ha
R042
0 AIH9
mutadi nazla
zukam ke lye
kuwat e mudafia
t thek
nhi ha
متعدی
نزال زکام
کے لیے
قوت
مدافیت
ٹہیک نہیں
ہے
LT40 Serum
Sample
SPOT Test
(Serum) (MG) +ve Poultry
murghi ko phepron
aur saans ke nali ke bemari ha
R042
1 MG
murghi ko
phepron aur
saans ke nali
ke bemari
ha
مرغی کو
پھپڑوں
اور سانس
کی نالی
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT40 Serum
Sample SPOT Test
(Serum) (MG) -ve Poultry
murghi ko phepron
aur saans ke nali ke
bemari nhi ha
R0422
MG
murghi ko
phepron aur
saans ke nali
ke
bemari nhi ha
مرغی کو
پھپڑوں
اور سانس
کی نالی
کی
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT41 Serum
Sample SPOT Test
(Serum) (MS) +ve Poultry
murghion
me joron ke bemari
ha
R0423
MS
murghion me
joron ke bemari
ha
مرغیوں
میں
جوڑوں
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT41 Serum
Sample SPOT Test
(Serum) (MS) -ve Poultry
murghion
me joron ke bemari
nhi ha
R0424
MS
murghio
n me joron ke bemari nhi ha
مرغیوں
میں
جوڑوں
کی
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT42 Serum
Sample SPOT Test
(Serum) (SPG) +ve Poultry
choote murghion me safeed
dast ha
R0425
SPG
choote murghio
n me safeed
dast ha
چھوٹی
مرغیوں
میں سفید
داست ہے
LT42 Serum
Sample
SPOT Test
(Serum) (SPG) -ve Poultry
choote murghion
me safeed dast nhi ha
R042
6 SPG
choote murghio
n me
safeed dast nhi
ha
چھوٹی
مرغیوں
میں سفید
داست نہیں
ہے
LT43 Whole
Blood
Spore Staining (Whole Blood)
(Anthrax)
+ve for spore forming
bacteria
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
sutt ha
R044
5
Anthra
x
janwar ko sutt
ha
جانور کو
سٹ ہے
LT43 Whole Blood
Spore Staining (Whole Blood)
(Anthrax)
-ve for spore forming bacteria
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko sutt nhi ha
R0446
Anthrax
janwar ko sutt nhi ha
جانور کو
سٹ نہیں
ہے
LT44 Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material) (BQ)
-ve for Clostridia
Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko chore mar ke bemari
nhi ha
R0484
BQ
Janwar ko
chore mar ke
bemari nhi ha
جانور کو
چوڑے
مار کی
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT44 Morbid
Sample
Culture Test
(Morbid Material) (BQ)
+ve for
Clostridia Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko chore mar
ke bemari ha
R048
5 BQ
Janwar ko
chore
mar ke bemari
ha
جانور کو
چوڑے
مار کی
بیماری
ہے
LT45 Morbid Sample
Culture Test
(Morbid Material)
(Enterotoxemia)
-ve for Clostridia
Sheep,Goat
Janwar ko
antaryon ka zeher nhi ha
R0486
Enterotoxemi
a
Janwar ko
antaryon ka
zeher
nhi ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کا زہر
نہیں ہے
LT45 Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material)
(Enterotoxemia)
+ve for Clostridia
Sheep,Goat Janwar ko antaryon
ka zeher ha
R0487
Enterotoxemi
a
Janwar ko
antaryon ka
zeher ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کا زہر ہے
LT46 Morbid
Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material) (Salmonellosis)
-ve for
Salmonellosis
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko jarasim ke
waja se hone wala mok nhi ha
R048
8
Salmo
nellosis
janwar ko
jarasim
ke waja se hone
wala
جانور کو
جراثیم کی
وجہ سے
ہونے واال
موک نہیں
ہے
mok nhi ha
LT46 Morbid Sample
Culture Test
(Morbid Material)
(Salmonellosis)
+ve for Salmonellosis
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko jarasim ke
waja se hone wala
mok ha
R0489
Salmo
nellosis
janwar ko
jarasim
ke waja se hone
wala
mok ha
جانور کو
جراثیم کی
وجہ سے
ہونے واال
موک ہے
LT47 Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material) (Mycoplasmosi
s)
-ve for Mycoplasmosi
s
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko mutadi
pnemonia
nhi ha
R0490
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar
ko mutadi pnemon
ia nhi ha
جانور کو
متعدی
پینیمونیا
نہیں ہے
LT47 Morbid Sample
Culture Test (Morbid
Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
+ve for Mycoplasmosi
s
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko mutadi
pnemonia
ha
R0491
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar ko
mutadi
pnemonia ha
جانور کو
متعدی
پینیمونیا
ہے
LT48 Morbid Sample
Culture Test
(Morbid Material)
(Colibacillosis)
-ve for Colibacil losis
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
jarasim ke waja se
hone wala mok nhi ha
R0492
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
jarasim
ke waja se hone
wala mok nhi
ha
جانور کو
جراثیم کی
وجہ سے
ہونے واال
موک نہیں
ہے
LT48 Morbid Sample
Culture Test
(Morbid Material)
(Colibacillosis)
+ve for Colibacil losis
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko jarasim ke
waja se hone wala mok nhi ha
R0493
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
jarasim
ke waja se hone
wala mok nhi
ha
جانور کو
جراثیم کی
وجہ سے
ہونے واال
موک نہیں
ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Salmonellosis)
Erythromycin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko Erythromycin muasar
ha
R0494
Salmonellosi
s
Janwar ko
Erythromycin
muasar ha
جانور کو
ایتھرومائ
سن موثر
ہے
LT49 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Salmonellosis)
Tylosine
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko Tylosine
muasar ha
R049
5
Salmonellosi
s
Janwar ko
Tylosine
muasar ha
جانور کو
ٹائیلوسن
موثر ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Salmonellosis)
Neomycin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Neomycin muasar ha
R0496
Salmo
nellosis
Janwar ko
Neomycin
muasar ha
جانور کو
نیومائسن
موثر ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Salmonellosis)
Flumiquin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Flumiquin muasar ha
R0497
Salmo
nellosis
Janwar ko
Flumiquin
muasar ha
جانور کو
فلمیکیوئن
موثر ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material)
(Salmonellosis)
Tetracycline
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko Tetracycline muasar
ha
R0498
Salmonellosi
s
Janwar
ko Tetracy
cline muasar
ha
جانور کو
ٹیٹراسائی
کلین موثر
ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Salmonellosis)
Tribercin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko Tribercin
muasar ha
R0499
Salmonellosi
s
Janwar ko
Tribercin
muasar ha
جانور کو
ٹریبیرسن
موثر ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Salmonellosis)
Ceftiofer Na
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Ceftiofer Na muasar
ha
R0500
Salmo
nellosis
Janwar ko
Ceftiofer Na
muasar ha
جانور کو
سیفٹیفر نہ
موثر ہے
LT49 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Salmonellosis)
Others
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko Dawai
muasar ha
R0501
Salmonellosi
s
Janwar
ko Dawai
muasar ha
جانور کو
دوائی
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Mycoplasmosi
s)
Erythromycin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko Erythromycin muasar
ha
R0502
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar
ko Erythromycin
muasar
ha
جانور کو
ایتھرومائ
سن موثر
ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
Tylosine Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko Tylosine
muasar ha
R0503
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar ko
Tylosine
muasar ha
جانور کو
ٹائیلوسن
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
Neomycin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry
Janwar ko
Neomycin muasar ha
R0504
Mycop
lasmosis
Janwar ko
Neomycin
muasar ha
جانور کو
نیومائسن
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Mycoplasmosi
s)
Flumiquin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko Flumiquin muasar ha
R0505
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar
ko Flumiqu
in muasar
ha
جانور کو
فلمیکیوئن
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
Tetracycline Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
Janwar ko Tetracyclin
R0506
Mycoplasmos
Janwar ko
جانور کو
ٹیٹراسائی
(Morbid Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
try e muasar ha
is Tetracycline
muasar ha
کلین موثر
ہے
LT50 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Mycoplasmosi
s)
Tribercin Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko Tribercin
muasar ha
R050
7
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar ko
Triberci
n muasar
ha
جانور کو
ٹریبیرسن
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
Ceftiofer Na Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko
Ceftiofer Na muasar
ha
R0508
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar ko
Ceftiofer Na
muasar ha
جانور کو
سیفٹیفر نہ
موثر ہے
LT50 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material)
(Mycoplasmosis)
Others Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
Janwar ko Dawai
muasar ha
R0509
Mycoplasmos
is
Janwar ko
Dawai muasar
ha
جانور کو
دوائی
موثر ہے
LT51 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Pasteurellosis
)
Erythromycin Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko Erythromyc
in muasar ha
R051
0
Pasteu
rellosis
Janwar ko
Erythro
mycin muasar
ha
جانور کو
ایتھرومائ
سن موثر
ہے
LT51 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Pasteurellosis)
Tylosine Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
Tylosine muasar ha
R0511
Pasteurellosis
Janwar ko
Tylosine muasar
ha
جانور کو
ٹائیلوسن
موثر ہے
LT51 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Pasteurellosis
)
Neomycin Cattle,Buffalo Janwar ko Neomycin
muasar ha
R0512
Pasteurellosis
Janwar
ko Neomyc
in muasar
ha
جانور کو
نیومائسن
موثر ہے
LT51 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Pasteurellosis
)
Flumiquin Cattle,Buffalo Janwar ko Flumiquin
muasar ha
R051
3
Pasteu
rellosis
Janwar ko
Flumiqu
in muasar
ha
جانور کو
فلمیکیوئن
موثر ہے
LT51 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Pasteurellosis)
Tetracycline Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
Tetracycline muasar
ha
R0514
Pasteurellosis
Janwar ko
Tetracycline
muasar ha
جانور کو
ٹیٹراسائی
کلین موثر
ہے
LT51 Morbid
Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Tribercin Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
Tribercin muasar ha
R051
5
Pasteu
rellosis
Janwar
ko Triberci
جانور کو
ٹریبیرسن
موثر ہے
Material) (Pasteurellosis
)
n muasar
ha
LT51 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material)
(Pasteurellosis)
Ceftiofer Na Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko Ceftiofer
Na muasar
ha
R0516
Pasteurellosis
Janwar
ko Ceftiofe
r Na
muasar ha
جانور کو
سیفٹیفر نہ
موثر ہے
LT51 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Pasteurellosis
)
Others Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
Dawai muasar ha
R051
7
Pasteu
rellosis
Janwar ko
Dawai muasar
ha
جانور کو
دوائی
موثر ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Colibacillosis)
Erythromycin
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Erythromycin muasar
ha
R0518
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
Erythromycin
muasar
ha
جانور کو
ایتھرومائ
سن موثر
ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material)
(Colibacillosis)
Tylosine
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko Tylosine
muasar ha
R0519
Colibacil losis
Janwar
ko Tylosine muasar
ha
جانور کو
ٹائیلوسن
موثر ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Colibacillosis)
Neomycin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko Neomycin
muasar ha
R0520
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
Neomycin
muasar ha
جانور کو
نیومائسن
موثر ہے
LT52 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Colibacillosis)
Flumiquin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Flumiquin muasar ha
R052
1
Colibac
il losis
Janwar ko
Flumiqu
in muasar
ha
جانور کو
فلمیکیوئن
موثر ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug
sensitivity (Morbid
Material) (Colibacillosis)
Tetracycline
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko
Tetracycline muasar
ha
R0522
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
Tetracycline
muasar
ha
جانور کو
ٹیٹراسائی
کلین موثر
ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid Material)
(Colibacillosis)
Tribercin
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko Tribercin
muasar ha
R0523
Colibacil losis
Janwar
ko Triberci
n
muasar ha
جانور کو
ٹریبیرسن
موثر ہے
LT52 Morbid Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Colibacillosis)
Ceftiofer Na
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
Janwar ko Ceftiofer
Na muasar
ha
R0524
Colibacil losis
Janwar ko
Ceftiofe
r Na muasar
جانور کو
سیفٹیفر نہ
موثر ہے
ha
LT52 Morbid
Sample
Drug sensitivity
(Morbid
Material) (Colibacillosis)
Others
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
Janwar ko Dawai
muasar ha
R052
5
Colibac
il losis
Janwar ko
Dawai
muasar ha
جانور کو
دوائی
موثر ہے
LT53 Morbid
Sample
Virus Isolation
(Morbid Material) (ND)
Positive Poultry
murghe me rani khet ka
jarasim paya gaya
ha
R052
6 ND
murghe me rani khet ka
jarasim paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
رانی
کھیت کا
جراثیم پایا
گیا ہے
LT53 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (ND) Negative Poultry
murghe me rani khet ka jarasim nhi paya gaya
ha
R0527
ND
murghe
me rani khet ka jarasim
nhi
paya gaya ha
مرغی میں
رانی
کھیت کا
جراثیم
نہیں پایا
گیا ہے
LT54 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (IB) Positive Poultry
murghe me mutadi
khansi ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
R0528
IB
murghe me
mutadi
khansi ka
jarasim paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی
کے
جراثیم
پائے گئے
ہیں
LT54 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (IB) Negative Poultry
murghe me mutadi
khansi ka jarasim nhi paya gaya
ha
R0529
IB
murghe me
mutadi
khansi ka
jarasim nhi
paya gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی
کے
جراثیم
نہیں پائے
گئے ہیں
LT55 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (AIH5)
Positive Poultry
murghe me mutadi
nazla zukam ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
R0530
AIH5
murghe me
mutadi
nazla zukam
ka
jarasim paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
پائے گئے
ہیں
LT55 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (AIH5)
Negative Poultry
murghe me mutadi
nazla zukam ka
jarasim nhi
paya gaya ha
R0531
AIH5
murghe me
mutadi nazla
zukam ka
jarasim nhi
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
نہیں پائے
گئے ہیں
paya gaya ha
LT56 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (AIH7)
Positive Poultry
murghe me mutadi
nazla zukam ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
R0532
AIH7
murghe me
mutadi
nazla zukam
ka
jarasim paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
پائے گئے
ہیں
LT56 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material)
(AIH7)
Negative Poultry
murghe me
mutadi nazla
zukam ka
jarasim nhi paya gaya
ha
R0533
AIH7
murghe me
mutadi nazla
zukam ka
jarasim nhi
paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
نہیں پائے
گئے ہیں
LT57 Morbid
Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (AIH9)
Positive Poultry
murghe me mutadi nazla
zukam ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
R053
4 AIH9
murghe
me mutadi nazla
zukam ka
jarasim paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
پائے گئے
ہیں
LT57 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation
(Morbid Material)
(AIH9)
Negative Poultry
murghe me mutadi
nazla zukam ka jarasim paya nhi
gaya ha
R0535
AIH9
murghe me
mutadi nazla
zukam ka
jarasim
paya nhi gaya
ha
مرغی میں
متعدی
کھانسی و
زکام کے
جراثیم
نہیں پائے
گئے ہیں
LT58 Morbid Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (CIAV)
Positive Poultry
murghe me
khoon ke kami ka jarasim
paya gaya
ha
R0536
CIAV
murghe me
khoon ke kami
ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
میں مرغی
خون کی
کمی کا
جراثیم پایا
گیا ہے
LT58 Morbid
Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (CIAV)
Negative Poultry
murghe me khoon ke kami ka
jarasim nhi paya gaya
ha
R053
7 CIAV
murghe me
khoon
ke kami ka
jarasim
مرغی میں
خون کی
کمی کا
جراثیم
نہیں پایا
گیا ہے
nhi paya
gaya ha
LT59 Morbid
Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (HPS)
Positive Poultry
Murghe me angara
bemari ka
jarasim paya gaya
ha
R053
8 HPS
Murghe
me angara bemari
ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
مرغی میں
انگارا
بیماری
کے
جراثیم
پائے گئے
ہیں
LT59 Morbid
Sample
Virus Isolation (Morbid
Material) (HPS)
Negative Poultry
Murghe me angara
bemari ka
jarasim nhi paya gaya
ha
R053
9 HPS
Murghe
me angara bemari
ka
jarasim nhi
paya
gaya ha
مرغی میں
انگارا
بیماری
کے
جراثیم
نہیں پائے
گئے ہیں
LT60 Morbid Sample
Histopathalogy (Morbid
Material) (Mareks
Disease)
Positive Poultry
murgion me surtaan ke bemari
ha
R0540
Mareks
Diseas
e
murgion me
surtaan ke
bemari ha
مرغی میں
سرطان
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT60 Morbid
Sample
Histopathalogy (Morbid
Material) (Mareks Disease)
Negative Poultry
murgion me surtaan
ke bemari nhi ha
R054
1
Mareks
Disease
murgion me
surtaan
ke bemari nhi ha
مرغی میں
سرطان
کی
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT61 Morbid Sample
Histopathalogy
(Morbid Material) (Leukosis)
Positive Poultry
murghion
me khoon ka cancer
ha
R0542
Leukosis
murghion me
khoon ka
cancer
ha
مرغیوں
میں خون
کا کینسر
ہے
LT61 Morbid Sample
Histopathalogy (Morbid
Material)
(Leukosis)
Negative Poultry
murghion me khoon ka cancer
nhi ha
R0543
Leukosis
murghio
n me khoon
ka
cancer nhi ha
مرغیوں
میں خون
کا کینسر
نہیں ہے
LT62 Skin Mallein Test
(Skin)
(Glanders)
+ve for
Glanders Equine
janwar ko bad kinar
ke bemari ha
R054
6
Glande
rs
janwar ko bad
kinar ke
bemari ha
جانور کو
بد کنار کی
بیماری
ہے
LT62 Skin Mallein Test
(Skin)
(Glanders)
-ve for Glanders
Equine bad kinar ke bemari
nhi ha
R0547
Glanders
bad kinar ke bemari
nhi ha
بد کنار
کی
بیماری
نہیں ہے
LT63
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)
Salmonellosis
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
antaryon ke bemari
ha
R0548
Salmo
nellosis
janwar ko
antaryon ke
bemari ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT64 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)
Mycoplasmosis
Positive Only Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
janwar ko saans ke bemari
R0549
Mycoplasmos
is
janwar
ko saans
ke bemari
جانور کو
سانس کی
بیماری
ہے
LT65 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal) Infectious
Coryza
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko kokra ke
bemari ha
R0550
Infectious
Coryza
murghi
ko kokra
ke bemari
ha
مرغی کو
کوکرا کی
بیماری
ہے
LT66 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal) E-Coli
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko antaryon
ke bemari ha
R055
1 E-Coli
janwar ko
antaryo
n ke bemari
ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT67
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)Clostridial enteritis
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
antaryon ke bemari
ha
R0552
Clostri
dial enterit
is
janwar ko
antaryon ke
bemari ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT68 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal)Ompha
litis
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko
konaroo ka kharb hona
R0553
Omphalitis
murghi
ko konaroo
ka kharb
hona
مرغی کو
کونارو کا
خراب ہونا
LT69 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal) Fowl
Cholera
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko hezaa ke
bemari ha
R0554
Fowl Choler
a
murghi ko
hezaa ke
bemari ha
مرغی کو
ہیضا کی
بیماری
ہے
LT70
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)Spirochetosis
Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko
chicharon ka bukhar
R055
5
Spiroc
hetosis
murghi ko
chicharon ka
bukhar
مرغی کو
چچڑوں
کا بخار
LT71 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)ND
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko rani khet
ha
R0556
ND murghi ko rani
khet ha
مرغی کو
رانی
کھیت ہے
LT72 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)HPAI Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko nazla
zukam ha
R0557
HPAI
murghi ko nazla zukam
ha
مرغی کو
نزال زکام
ہے
LT73 Autopsy/
Dead
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko
nazla
R055
8 LPAI
murghi
ko nazla
مرغی کو
نزال زکام
Animal Animal)LPAI zukam ha zukam ha
ہے
LT74 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)IBD Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko
gumboro ke bemari
ha
R0559
IBD
murghi ko
gumboro ke
bemari
ha
مرغی کو
گیمبرو کی
بیماری
ہے
LT75 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)IB
Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko mutadi
khansi ke bemari ha
R056
0 IB
murghi ko
mutadi khansi
ke bemari
ha
مرغی کو
متعدی
کھانسی
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT76 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)Fowl
Pox
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko chechak ke bemari ha
R0561
Fowl Pox
murghi ko
chechak ke
bemari
ha
مرغی کو
چیچک
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT77 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)HPS
Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko angara
bemari ka
jarasim paya gaya
ha
R056
2 HPS
murghi
ko angara bemari
ka jarasim
paya gaya ha
مرغی کو
انگارا
بیماری کا
جراثیم پایا
گیا ہے
LT78 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal)Marek
s Disease
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko surtaan ke bemari ha
R0563
Mareks
Disease
murghi
ko surtaan
ke bemari
ha
مرغی کو
سرطان
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT79 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal)Lymph
oid leucosis
Positive Only Poultry murghi ko khoon ka
cancer ha
R0564
Lymphoid
leucosi
s
murghi ko
khoon ka
cancer ha
مرغی
کوخون کا
کینسر ہے
LT80
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)IBH
Positive Only Poultry
murghi ko
Jigar ke bemari ha
R056
5 IBH
murghi ko Jigar
ke bemari
ha
مرغی کو
جگر کی
بیماری
ہے
LT81
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)HS
Positive Only Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
gul ghooto ke bemari
ha
R0566
HS
Janwar ko gul
ghooto ke
bemari ha
جانور کو
گل گھٹو
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT82
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)BQ
Positive Only Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko
chore mar ke bemari
R056
7 BQ
Janwar
ko chore
جانور کو
چوڑے
مار کی
ha mar ke bemari
ha
بیماری
ہے
LT83 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)FMD Positive Only Cattle,Buffalo
Janwar ko mun khur ke bemari
ha
R0568
FMD
Janwar
ko mun khur ke bemari
ha
جانور
کومہہ
کھئر کی
بیمار ہے
LT84 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)ET
Positive Only Sheep,Goat
Janwar ko anterion ke
zehr ke bemari ha
R056
9 ET
Janwar ko
anterion ke
zehr ke bemari
ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کی
بیماری
ہے
LT85 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal)Poisoni
ng
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
zehar khurani ke
waja se maut hue
ha
R0570
Poisoning
janwar ko
zehar khurani ke waja
se maut hue ha
جانور کو
زہر
کھورانی
کی وجہ
سے موت
ہوئی ہے
LT86 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)Pleuropneumonia
Positive Only Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try
janwar ko sanns ke
bemari ha
R057
1
Pleuropneum
onia
janwar ko
sanns
ke bemari
ha
جانور کو
سانس کی
بیماری
ہے
LT87
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)PPR
Positive Only Sheep,Goat
janwar ko
kata ke bemari ha
R057
2 PPR
janwar ko kata
ke bemari
ha
جانور کو
کاٹا کی
بیماری
ہے
LT88 Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead Animal)Pneum
onia
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
saans ke bemari ke
waja se maut
R0573
Pneumonia
janwar ko
saans ke
bemari ke waja
se maut
جانور کو
سانس کی
بیماری
کی وجہ
سے موت
ہوئی
LT89 Autopsy/
Dead
Animal
Post Mortem (Autopsy/Dead
Animal)Toxicosis
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko zehrele
made ke
waja se maut
R057
4
Toxico
sis
janwar ko
zehrele
made ke waja se maut
جانور کو
زہریلے
مادے کی
وجہ سے
موت ہوئی
LT90
Autopsy/
Dead Animal
Post Mortem
(Autopsy/Dead Animal)Others
Positive Only
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko bemari ke
waja se maut
R057
5 Others
janwar ko
bemari ke waja se maut
پانی میں
تزابیت
ہے
LT91 Water PH (Water)
(Water
Quality)
Acidic
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me
tezabiat ha
R057
6
Water
Quality
pani me tezabiat
ha
پانی میں
اساثیت
ہے
LT91 Water PH (Water)
(Water
Quality)
Basic
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me
asasiat ha
R057
7
Water
Quality
pani me asasiat
ha
پانی ٹھیک
ہے
LT91 Water PH (Water)
(Water Quality)
Normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
pani thek ha
R0578
Water Quality
pani thek ha
پانی میں
ہل شدہ
نمکیات
زیادہ ہیں
LT92 Water TDS (Water)
(Water
Quality)
High
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
pani me hal shuda
namkiat
zyada hn
R0579
Water Quality
pani me hal
shuda namkiat
zyada hn
پانی میں
ہل شدہ
نمکیات
ٹھیک ہیں
LT92 Water TDS (Water)
(Water
Quality)
Normal
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me hal shuda
namkiat thek hn
R058
0
Water
Quality
pani me hal
shuda
namkiat thek hn
پانی میں
ہل شدہ
نمکیات
ٹھیک ہیں
LT93 Water
Bacterial count (Water)
(Water Quality)
Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me jarasim ke
zyadati ha
R058
1
Water
Quality
pani me jarasim
ke
zyadati ha
پانی میں
جراثیم کی
زیاتی ہے
LT93 Water
Bacterial count (Water)
(Water Quality)
non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani thek
ha
R058
2
Water
Quality
pani
thek ha
پانی ٹھیک
ہے
LT94 Water
Bacterial isolation and identification
(Water) (Water
Quality)
-ve for
bacteria
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me jarasim nhi
hn
R058
3
Water
Quality
pani me jarasim
nhi hn
پانی میں
جراثیم
نہیں ہیں
LT94 Water
Bacterial isolation and
identification (Water) (Water
Quality)
+ve for bacteria
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
pani me jarasim hn
R0584
Water Quality
pani me
jarasim hn
پانی میں
جراثیم
ہیں
LT95 Skin Microscopy (Skin) (Tick Infestation)
Soft Tick
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko chichar hn
R0585
Tick Infesta
tion
janwar
ko chichar
hn
جانور کو
چچڑ ہیں
LT95 Skin
Microscopy
(Skin) (Tick Infestation)
Hard Tick
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
chichar hn
R058
6
Tick
Infestation
janwar ko
chichar hn
جانور کو
چچڑ ہیں
LT96 Skin
KOH Test
(Skin) (Mite Infestation)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko kere ke
waja se kharish nhi
ha
R058
7
Mite
Infestation
janwar ko kere ke waja
se kharish nhi ha
جانور کو
کی کیڑے
وجہ سے
خارش
نہیں ہے
LT96 Skin
KOH Test
(Skin) (Mite Infestation)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
kere ke waja se
kharish ha
R0588
Mite
Infestation
janwar ko kere
ke waja se
kharish ha
جانور کو
کیڑے کی
وجہ سے
خارش ہے
LT97 Skin
Visual aid
(Skin) (Lice Infestation)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar me joon nhi ha
R0589
Lice
Infestation
janwar
me joon nhi ha
جانور میں
جوں نہیں
ہے
LT97 Skin
Visual aid
(Skin) (Lice Infestation)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar me
joon ha
R059
0
Lice
Infestation
janwar
me joon ha
جانور میں
جوں ہے
LT98 Skin Visual aid
(Skin) (Flea
Infestation)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar me pisoo nhi
ha
R0591
Flea Infesta
tion
janwar me
pisoo
nhi ha
جانور میں
پسو نہیں
ہے
LT98 Skin Visual aid
(Skin) (Flea Infestation)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar me pisoo ha
R0592
Flea Infesta
tion
janwar me
pisoo ha
جانور میں
پسو ہے
LT99 Skin KOH Test
(Skin) (Fungal Infestation)
-ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Cam
el and Others
janwar ko phaphondi ka marz nhi
ha
R0593
Fungal Infesta
tion
janwar
ko phaphondi ka
marz nhi ha
جانور کو
پھپوندی
کا مرض
نہیں ہے
LT99 Skin KOH Test
(Skin) (Fungal
Infestation)
+ve
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko phaphondi
ka marz ha
R059
4
Fungal Infesta
tion
janwar ko
phapho
ndi ka marz
ha
جانور کو
پھپوندی
کا مرض
ہے
LT100
Skin
Culture Test
(Skin) (Fungal Infestation)
Others
Cattle,Buffalo,S
heep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko
phaphondi ka marz ha
R0595
Fungal
Infestation
janwar ko
phaphondi ka marz
ha
جانور کو
پھپوندی
کا مرض
ہے
LT100
Skin Culture Test
(Skin) (Fungal Infestation)
Aspergillosis
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poultry,Equine,Camel and Others
janwar ko phaphondi ka marz ha
R0596
Fungal Infesta
tion
janwar
ko phaphondi ka marz
ha
جانور کو
پھپوندی
کا مرض
ہے
LT101
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate)
(FMD)
+ve for Sero Type "A" FMD
Virus Cattle,Buffalo
janwar ko mun khur
ha
R0597
FMD janwar ko mun khur ha
جانور کو
منہ کھر
ہے
LT10
1
Tissue
Virus Isolate
PCR (Tissue
Virus Isolate) (FMD)
-ve for Sero
Type "A" FMD Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
janwar ko
mun khur nhi ha
R059
8 FMD
janwar ko mun
khur nhi ha
جانور کو
منہ کھر
نہیں ہے
LT101
Tissue Virus
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate)
+ve for Sero Type "O" FMD
Cattle,Buffalo janwar ko mun khur
R0599
FMD janwar ko mun
جانور کو
منہ کھر
Isolate (FMD) Virus ha khur ha ہے
LT10
1
Tissue
Virus Isolate
PCR (Tissue
Virus Isolate) (FMD)
-ve for Sero
Type "O" FMD Virus
Cattle,Buffalo
janwar ko
mun khur nhi ha
R060
0 FMD
janwar ko mun
khur nhi ha
جانور کو
منہ کھر
نہیں ہے
LT101
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate)
(FMD)
+ve for Sero Type
"Asia-1" FMD
Virus
Cattle,Buffalo janwar ko mun khur
ha
R0601
FMD janwar ko mun
khur ha
جانور کو
منہ کھر
ہے
LT101
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate)
(FMD)
-ve for Sero Type
"Asia-1" FMD
Virus
Cattle,Buffalo janwar ko mun khur
nhi ha
R0602
FMD
janwar ko mun
khur nhi
ha
جانور کو
منہ کھر
نہیں ہے
LT102
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate)
(BQ) +ve Cattle,Buffalo
janwar ko chore mar
ha
R0603
BQ
janwar
ko chore
mar ha
جانور کو
چوڑے
مار ہے
LT102
Tissue
Virus Isolate
PCR (Tissue
Virus Isolate) (BQ)
-ve Cattle,Buffalo
janwar ko
chore mar nhi ha
R0604
BQ
janwar ko
chore mar nhi
ha
جانور کو
چوڑے
مار نہیں
ہے
LT103
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue
Virus Isolate) (Enterotoxemi
a)
+ve Sheep,Goat janwar ko antaryun
ka zehr ha
R0605
Enterotoxemi
a
janwar
ko antaryu
n ka zehr ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کا زہر ہے
LT103
Tissue Virus
Isolate
PCR (Tissue Virus Isolate) (Enterotoxemi
a)
-ve Sheep,Goat
janwar ko antaryun
ka zehr nhi ha
R0606
Enterotoxemi
a
janwar
ko antaryu
n ka zehr nhi
ha
جانور کو
انتڑیوں
کا زہر
نہیں ہے
LT10
4
Feed
Sample
ELISA (Feed
Sample) (Mycotixicosis)
Significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
khoraq me phaphondi
ke zehrele made
moujud hn
R060
7
Mycoti
xicosis
khoraq me
phaphondi ke
zehrele made
moujud
hn
خوراک
میں
پھپوندی
کے
زہریلے
مادے
موجود ہے
LT10
4
Feed
Sample
ELISA (Feed Sample)
(Mycotixicosis)
non significant
Cattle,Buffalo,Sheep,Goat,Poul
try,Equine,Camel and Others
khoraq me phaphondi ke zehrele
made moujud nhi
hn
R060
8
Mycoti
xicosis
khoraq me
phaphondi ke
zehrele made
moujud nhi hn
خوراک
میں
پھپوندی
کے
زہریلے
مادے
موجود ہے
Annex-M
Annex-N&O (See Annexure F)
Annex-P
Annex-Q
Annex-R