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RBST launches project to secure future of traditional Lop pigs

The future of the British Lop will now be more secure thanks to a donation of £94,500 from the Gerald Fallowes Discretionary Trust in support of RBST’s pig conservation work.
 
The new project will involve cutting-edge genomic work, new boar semen collections and advanced embryo work.
 
George Eustice, MP for Camborne and Redruth, said: “My great grandfather was one of the founders of the National Long White Lop Eared Pig Society, now known simply as the British Lop.
 
“This ground-breaking project to enhance and improve genetics in one of our rarest native pig breeds is crucial work and I am delighted that the British Lop has been chosen as the breed to pilot this approach.”
 
The grant will be spread over the course of the five-year project. Genomic work will be carried out to establish a profile for the breed, which will make the British Lop the only native breed to have such modern scientific test for breed purity. By understanding the genetic information, it will make it possible to test the purity of the animal or animal products being offered for sale.
 
RBST will collect genetic material from 15 boars, and one focus will be the ‘recycling’ of frozen semen pellets, known to be difficult to use, which enable genetically distinct boars to be bred early in the project and then collected from later. It is hoped that collections can be made from these newly bred boars using more modern and efficient techniques.
 
Finally, research will be carried out into the collection, freezing and long-term storage of pig embryos, which will hopefully be followed by successful collections of embryos later in the project.
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