Philippine Carabao Center

The Philippine Carabao Center (Filipino: Sentro ng Kalabaw sa Pilipinas[2] or Sentro ng Pilipinas para sa Kalabaw[3]) an attached agency of the Department of Agriculture, was established at Science City of Muñoz in Nueva Ecija province in 1992 to breed and cross carabao based on high-yield Murrah buffalo (native breed of Haryana state of India) in the Philippines as a multi-purpose animal that can be raised for milk, meat, hide, and draft.[4][5][6][7]

Philippine Carabao Center
Sentro ng Pilipinas para sa Kalabaw
Logo

Philippine Carabao Center
Agency overview
FormedMarch 27, 1992
HeadquartersMuñoz, Nueva Ecija
15°43′58″N 120°55′52″E
Annual budget₱587.10 billion (2020)[1]
Agency executive
  • Claro Mingala, Executive Director (OIC)
Parent agencyDepartment of Agriculture
Websitewww.pcc.gov.ph

History

It was set up in 1992 on a 40 hectares (99 acres) piece of land donated by Central Luzon State University on its main campus, initially with 6 network centers in 1992. 7 more network centers were added in 1994 bringing the total to 13. It was sponsored as a bill by the then senator Joseph Estrada and eventually enacted as a law through Republic Act 7307 or the Philippine Carabao Act of 1992.[8]

Imported Breeds

Indian-origin Murrah buffalo dairy breed of Asian water buffalo, at PCC imported from Bulgaria.[9]

To improve the breeds and milk yield, high milk yield Murrah buffalo breed were imported from the Central Institute for Research on Buffaloes, Hisar, India, a reputed species of the dairy type originating from Haryana state of India. Murrah breed are reputed as a high milk yield breed that can produce an average of more than eight liters of milk daily over a 300 days long annual productive cycle. Better performing Murrah buffalo can produce 12 to 15 liters per day on average, with top performers going up to 25 liters per day. PCC also imported Murrah breed from non-native-breed third-party countries such Bulgaria, USA and Latin America. PCC breeds and cross-breeds Murrah buffalo through artificial insemination.[10]

Reproduction Technology

The PCC had some success in reproductive biotechnology in 2004 when the first test-tube buffalo was born on April 5, also the birthday of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Incidentally, the test-tube buffalo is a female and was named as "Glory" after the President.

Milk Yield Improvement

Late in 2007, according to Filipino scientists, the Center located in Nueva Ecija initiated a study to breed the super water buffalo that could produce 4 to 18 liters of milk/day using gene-based technology.[8] The majority of the funding came from the Department of Science and Technology. When this marker-assisted selection process is perfected it will allow the poor farmers to conserve their resources by raising only the best producers that are genetically selected soon after birth.

Network Centers

PCC has 13 network centers at various host universities including the following:[11][12]

Panorama of the super carabaos from the view deck

See also

References

  1. Aika Rey (8 January 2020). "Where will the money go?". Rappler. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  2. "Impormasyon Tungkol sa Unibersidad" (PDF) (in Filipino). Central Luzon State University: 17. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. Mga Pangalan ng Tanggapan ng Pamahalaan sa Filipino (PDF) (2013 ed.). Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino. p. 9. ISBN 978-971-0197-22-4.
  4. "Philippine Carabao Center History". Archived from the original on 7 April 2008. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  5. Hernandez, Ma. Eloisa E. "The Philippine Carabao Center ...has gone a long way". Bureau of Agricultural Research. Archived from the original on 23 July 2010. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  6. Robles, Chan. "REPUBLIC ACT NO. 7307". Robles Chan Virtual Law Library. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  7. "The Philippines: Enterprise-Driven Dairy Development" (PDF). Philippine Carabao Center. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  8. Uy, Jocelyn (31 December 2007). "Super carabao making the scene in year of the rats". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 9 June 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  9. "Homepage". Philippine Carabao Center.
  10. "Philippine Carabao Center". chanrobles.com.
  11. "PCC Network centers.", PCC Archived 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. "PCC history"., PCC Archived 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine.
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