Breeding associations and breed societies
Breeding associations and breed societies are essential networks for the farmers having three main tasks: facilitating the exchange of breeding material, promoting sustainable breeding practices and sharing traditional knowledge about suitable production systems.
Systematic expanding of the semen collection
Access to frozen semen is essential for breeding and gene banking. Since the late 1970s, and especially since the early 2000s, semen has been collected regularly from all the native breeds of cattle, sheep and goat. The semen is available for purchase by breeders. In addition, some doses of all donors have been put in a gene bank for long time storage.
Sustainable breeding in small populations
Communicating the special challenges in sustainable breeding in small populations has been a key task in the Norwegian work on conservation of native endangered livestock breeds.
Easy and free access to breeding advice
Since the early 1990s, farmers with endangered native breeds of livestock have had free access to advice on sustainable breeding in small populations from Norwegian Genetic Resource Centre. To assess the impact of breeding efforts between 1990 and 2020, effective population sizes (Ne) were estimated for the six endangered native cattle breeds every ten years in this period. The results show that the breeding work has been sustainable, with Ne increasing or remaining above 100.
New uses
Finding new areas of use has been important for all the livestock species with native endangered breeds. The horses are no longer working animals; they are used in sports. The goat and sheep breeds are successful as landscape managers and in 2010 a local spinning mill started spinning knitting wool from the challenging wool from the endangered native sheep breeds. This has turned out to be a success and in 2023 the mill produced yarn from a total of six tonnes of wool, only from native sheep breeds. The native endangered cattle breeds are now mainly used for meat production. The increase of breeding females in the decade from 2014 to 2023 has been from 2852 breeding cows to 5509 (assembled figures for all the six breeds). This increase of 93% in population status is due to the increased number of suckler cows, see Figure 19.