Changes in locomotor activity of beef females during the 72 h prepartum were determined in 3 experiments: (i) a 2-yr study with spring-calving multiparous cows (Exp. 1; n = 34 and 27 for years 1 and 2, respectively); (ii) spring-calving primiparous (first pregnancy; n = 13) and multiparous (n = 21) dams (Exp. 2); and (iii) fall-calving multiparous cows (Exp. 3; n = 33). For all experiments, IceQube activity monitors (iceRobotics, Edinburgh, UK) were placed above the left hind fetlock of pregnant females ≥3 d prepartum. During the calving season, females were housed in 18 × 61 m drylots with ad libitum access to hay or haylage. Parturition was closely monitored, and time of birth was noted. Motion index, standing and lying time, step count, and the number of lying bouts for each dam (summed per hour) were determined for the 72 h preceding calving. Within experiment, data were analyzed by day (days -3 to -1 prepartum), by 6-h period during the final 24 h prepartum, and by hour during the final 6 h prepartum using a mixed model with time as a repeated effect. Year was also included as a fixed effect in Exp. 1. Fixed effects of parity and time prepartum × parity were included for Exp. 2. In all 3 experiments, motion index, standing time, step count, and the number of lying bouts were greater (P < 0.001) on day -1 compared with days -2 and -3 prepartum. In the 24 h prepartum, dams had greater (P < 0.01) motion index, standing time, step count, and the number of lying bouts during 6 h preceding parturition compared with -11 to -6 h in all experiments. Motion index, step count, and lying bouts changed (P ≤ 0.02) during the last 6 h in all experiments. Primiparous dams had more (P ≤ 0.01) lying bouts than multiparous dams during the last day and -11 to -6 prepartum. In all experiments, the number of lying bouts more than doubled (P < 0.001) from -2 to -1 prepartum, with no effect of year (P = 0.57) in Exp. 1 or parity (P ≥ 0.29) in Exp. 2. This suggests that lying bout changes may be the most reliable of parameters measured in detection of calving. Moreover, fall-calving cow behavioral patterns were similar to changes observed in spring-calving females, suggesting that calving season may have minimal effects on pre-calving behavior. Overall, electronic locomotor activity monitors can detect behavioral changes peripartum in beef heifers and cows. More research is necessary to determine if these can be used to remotely sense early signs of parturition in beef cattle.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/sky448 | DOI Listing |
J Dairy Sci
November 2024
Department of Animal and Dairy Science, University of Georgia, Athens, USA, 30602. Electronic address:
The assessment of animal behavior serves as a valuable approach to identify illness and animal responses to environmental stimuli. Both heat stress and mastitis are reported to impact the behavioral responses of dairy cattle. However, little is known about the effects of heat stress on the lactating cow's behavioral responses to mastitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dairy Sci
October 2024
PEGASE, INRAE, Institut Agro, 35590, Saint Gilles, France. Electronic address:
On dairy farms, milking practices can temporarily restrict cows from accessing drinking water. This study examined how different types of temporary water restriction, similar to those commonly encountered on farms, may affect the individual behavior and physiological dehydration status of cows and whether these effects could differ according to the cow's position in the social hierarchy of the group. Four treatments were applied (CTRL = free access to the drinker and feed fence, HL = 2 h of headlock at the feed fence after morning and evening milking, D2H = free access to the feed fence and no access to water for 2 h after milking and D4H = free access to the feed fence and no access to water for 4 h after milking) to 4 groups of 10 lactating dairy cows using a 4 × 4 Latin square design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrev Vet Med
December 2024
School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington Campus, Leicestershire LE12 5RD, UK.
Subtle changes in behaviour, which may be useful as early indicators of disease or stress in farm animals, can be detected using precision livestock technologies. However, as animals often display differences in their baseline behaviours from one another, individual variation needs to be measured and accounted for if we want to successfully detect abnormalities. In addition to consistent individual differences in their mean behaviour, which are called behavioural types and measured by repeatability, animals may differ in the amount of day-to-day variation around their own mean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJDS Commun
September 2024
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32608.
Controlled studies have shown that heat stress abatement positively influences health, productivity, behavior, and reproductive performance of dairy cows during all stages of the lactation cycle. Based on previous findings, the present study focused on a better understanding of how seasonal changes affect the behavior of multiparous lactating dairy cows kept in typical free-stall housing with the objective to aid in the management of lactating cows exposed to variable environmental conditions. Automated monitoring devices (Nedap, the Netherlands) were used to assess behavioral activity of mature Holstein dairy cows during the "hot season" (HS; n = 19; July, August, and September) and the "cool season" (CS; n = 15; December, January, and February) under normal management conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJDS Commun
September 2024
Department of Animal, Veterinary and Food Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844.
Wildfires are burning more acres annually, contributing to air pollution across the United States. Air pollutants, such as particulate matter (PM), have health implications for humans and animals, and are known to alter behavior in several species, but effects of wildfire PM on dairy calf behavior are unknown. The present study aimed to understand how dairy calf standing and lying behavior is affected by wildfire PM.
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