Our Future: Alpaca Breed Standards
of The Filp of the Coin?
By Mike Safley
The industry is making steady progress on breed standards. Only
last year the old Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association, Inc. (AOBA)
Board of Directors forced through an ill-advised by-law change that
declared that there would be no alpaca breed standards established
without two-thirds of the AOBA membership voting in favor of the
proposed standard. As it turns out the Colorado Appeals court decided
that the old Board of Directors had acted in a manner that was contrary
to the Colorado statutes for non-profit corporations. The court
reversed the Board of Directors’ actions. The issue, of breed standards,
is now back in play and the industry has some decisions to make.
The debate took a considerable step forward at the 2004 AOBA/ARI
Fiber to Fashion Conference in Reno, Nevada. Curt Gedney, an ARI
board member, organized a presentation on breed standards for the
conference attendees. The panel discussion was moderated by Dr.
David Ames of Colorado State University. The panel included Dr.
John Edwards, Vice President of Express Ranch; the second largest
supplier of cattle genetics in the United States; Zane Akins who
spent thirteen years as the CEO of American Holstein Association;
and Dr. Phil Sponenberg who serves as technical coordinator for
the American Livestock Breeds Conservatory.
Dr. Ames began the evening by suggesting that the alpaca industry
had the opportunity to create their vision of an ideal alpaca in
the form of written standards, goals or guidelines. “The alternative,”
he said, “is to flip a coin about our future alpacas.” The panel
was asked to answer three questions about alpaca breed standards:
- What experience have you had with breed standards in livestock
organizations? Explain the extent to which you have seen a breed
standard transform an industry. Please make note of problems encountered
as well as successes.
- How might a breed standard help the alpaca industry reach its
goals? How do you think a breed standard would affect the current
alpaca market as well as the long-term market for alpaca fiber?
- How have other breed organizations approached the creation of
a breed standard as an organization, and how might the alpaca
industry approach this process?
The discussion that followed was direct and pointed. It was obvious
to the audience that the panel had a wealth of experience with breed
standards. As one attendee said to me, “They have been there and
done that.”
Zane Akins hit a line drive to the audience when he observed, “I
want to tell you folks what I think you are thinking about breed
standards. I believe that there are four prevalent opinions out
there among you: 1) There are those of you who say, I am absolutely
in favor of breed standards, 2) There are those of you who say,
I want to learn more about breed standards, 3) Then there are those
who say to themselves, “I don’t care what they do, I am going to
breed to my own standard,” and 4) Finally, there are some of you
that are going to fight breed standards to the bitter end.
No one in the audience disagreed with Zane’s assessment.
Later in the program Mr. Akins, who helped pioneer performance
pedigrees and the establishment of estimated progeny differences
in the Holstein industry, told the following story about his experiences
with advocating standards for dairy cows.
Back when I was a young man, working for the Holstein association,
I put on a series of meetings to explain some changes in the performance
standards for Holsteins. When I finished my presentation to the
audience a man stood up and said, “I want you to know that I have
opposed every change that you guys have ever proposed involving
my cows. And I am going to oppose this change as well because
I want to keep my record clean. But I also want to thank you for
all the positive changes in our breed that have resulted from
your proposals over the years.”
“That was thanks enough,” said Zane.
Dr. John Edwards made a point dear to my heart when he told the
audience that there was no way a judge could judge livestock without
an ideal animal pictured in his mind. And without a standard or
some sort written of description being set out that it would be
near to impossible for anyone to judge livestock. I personally believe
that a lack of a standard creates uneven show results in the alpaca
show ring.
A question and answer period followed the panel’s presentation.
One of the panel members listened to several of the questions before
he observed that he believed that the common underlying concern
in the questions was “a fear of losing” if breed standards were
established. He went on to say that, while he did not believe that
it would be the case, he felt that alpaca breeders needed to set
aside their personal concerns for the betterment of the breed.
I joined several AOBA Board of Directors members and other concerned
alpaca breeders in opposing the old Board of Directors’ action by
filing what came to be known as the “intervener’s lawsuit.” The
lawsuit took issue with the Board of Directors’ action to make a
bylaw change that made it very difficult to establish breed standards
for alpacas. The “interveners” were made up of people that both
supported and opposed breed standards. But, they universally agreed
that the old Board of Directors had acted outside the authority
given them in the AOBA bylaws when they approved a vote to amend
the bylaws. The Colorado court agreed.
I personally believe that the issue of breed standards belongs
in the AOBA show rules rather than in the bylaws of the association.
The “interveners” took quite a bit of heat for their stance. One
author went so far as to call the lawsuit “frivolous” in a recently
published book about alpacas. But all of that is behind us now.
The question becomes what is next on the issue of alpaca breed standards?
I have made numerous breed standard presentations to audiences
over the past few yeas and I always advocate for breed standards.
The people who take issue with me almost always argue that breed
standards might hurt individual breeders in the marketplace. I believe
that any initiative that make’s alpacas more productive in the long
run will ultimately benefit every breeder. I do not at all agree
that breed standards will hurt individual breeders. Breed standards
are a herd improvement tool.
In Reno the panel members made it clear that, for breed standards
to be successfully established in our industry, there has to be
“buy in.” The members must feel that standards are inclusive not
exclusive. And whatever goals, guidelines or standards that are
adopted must allow for change and become an evolving document.
What’s next? I would like to see a task force appointed by the
ARI and AOBA Boards of Directors. I think the task force should
include a representative of each of the affiliates; a board member
from AOBA and ARI; a member of the Alpaca Show Rules Committee;
a member of the Judges Training Committee and; one or two senior
alpaca judges. I also would like to see the continuing participation
of the panel led by Dr. Ames.
I would hope that the task force could meet in Kentucky at the
2004 AOBA convention. They would be charged with creating a process
for examining the issue of breed standards.
In the end I would urge that the process result in a Breed Type
Conference held at the 2005 joint ARI/AOBA Fiber to Fashion Conference
in Orlando, Florida. Dr. Ames says that these types of conferences
are the traditional vehicle for livestock breeds who wish to establish
or update breed standards. A typical conference would last for a
day or two and would allow all of the “stakeholders” to have their
say.
Once the conference was complete the industry could decide whether
or not to adopt standards and if so, what the standards should look
like. It is like the saying on Fox News, “You Decide.”
Related links:
Standards
by Thomas Shaw
A
Comparative Analysis of Alpaca Breed Standards
Australian
Alpaca Association Breed Standards
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