Belgian artist helps Ethiopia engineer the perfect chicken

PHOTO: Koen Vanmechelen/ Facebook

Incubated Worlds is an artwork and research center at once, a combined effort of internationally acclaimed Belgian artist Koen Vanmechelen and two ILRI livestock geneticists Tadelle Dessie and Olivier Hanotte.

By Thin Lei Win (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

Researchers in Ethiopia are embarking on a quest to create the perfect chicken for African farmers with an unlikely ally – a Belgian conceptual artist who has spent 20 years crossbreeding indigenous chickens, from China and Egypt to Senegal and Cuba.

Incubated Worlds, a research and breeding center in the capital Addis Ababa, will also house a permanent art installation showcasing the work of Koen Vanmechelen, including photographs, videos, and books of chickens’ genetic codes.

“It’s the most sexy chicken coop in the world,” said Mr. Vanmechelen, whose Cosmopolitan Chicken Project set out to create a chicken carrying the genes of all the planet’s breeds.

The artist told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that each successive generation of Cosmopolitan Chickens is more resilient, lives longer, and is less susceptible to diseases, proving the importance of genetic diversity.

At the center, scientists from the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and local partners will compare different types of Ethiopian chickens and crossbreed them naturally with others, including Vanmechelen’s.

A quarter of the world’s 815 million undernourished people are in Sub-Saharan Africa, and climate conditions are worsening hunger, says the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

Feeding children an egg a day could prevent stunting, a condition resulting from poor nutrition which hinders cognitive growth, learning, and economic potential, research shows.

Some 58 million children are stunted in Africa, costing $25 billion a year, according to the African Development Bank.

Olivier Hanotte, a scientist with ILRI in Addis Ababa, said crossbreeding Vanmechelen’s highly diverse birds with local varieties could result in a breed that is healthier and more resilient – but they must also be productive.

“What we want is … an animal who produces eggs, which would grow relatively fast and can reach a weight of two to three kilos in a minimum amount of time,” he said.

Mr. Hanotte praised Vanmechelen for doing what scientists could not – creating a unique population of chickens that gives a snapshot of the genetic diversity of birds outside Ethiopia.

“That is a fantastic resource for us,” he said.

“There’s no way that as a scientist I would have gotten a grant for 20 years to do this sort of experiment.”

Chickens can also empower women, who are often their custodians in rural areas, as they reproduce quickly – hatching after 21 days incubation, he said.

Source: Christian Science Monitor


1 Comment

  1. I am glad if this project has no strings attached,like patent right as the Dutch did with our Teff.We should also be cautious not to loose the local varieties in the name of cross breeding.Atleast we should preserve their genetic material. I would also be happy if scientists or experts in this area comment on this new approach.

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