Gyeongbuk Agricultural Research and Extension Services announces research results on Hanwoo cattle, feed, and genetic resources.

Published Jan 2, 2026

Tridge summary

The Gyeongsangbuk-do Livestock Technology Research Institute (Director Lee Jae-sik) held a test research report meeting on the 22nd in the institute's conference room to share eight livestock research tasks carried out over the past year and the direction of new research tasks for 2026. The report meeting was attended by experts in the field of livestock, including Professor Park Yong-su from the Korea National Agricultural University, Professors Kim Myeong-ok and Lee Won-jae from Kyungpook National University, and Professor Kim Do-hyeong from the National Gyeongbuk University, who examined the research results and engaged in in-depth discussions about future tasks. At the report meeting, topics included △ development of Hanwoo candidate semen, △ improvement through livestock genetic resources characteristics investigation, △ egg collection (OPU) technology using regular estrous cycles, and △ environmentally friendly no-till farming methods.

Original content

On the 22nd, the Gyeongsangbuk-do Livestock Technology Research Institute (Director Lee Jae-sik) held a test research report meeting in the institute's conference room to share the results of eight livestock research tasks carried out over the past year and the direction of new research tasks for 2026. The report meeting was attended by experts in the field of livestock such as Professor Park Yong-su from the Korea National College of Agriculture and Fisheries, Professor Kim Myeong-ok and Professor Lee Won-jae from Kyungpook National University, and Professor Kim Do-hyeong from the National Gyeongbuk University, who checked the research results and had in-depth discussions on future tasks. The research results announced at the meeting included the development of a Hanwoo candidate semen, improvement through the investigation of livestock genetic resources, egg collection (OPU) technology using a regular estrous cycle, forage crop production technology using environmentally ...
Source: Aflnews

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