Systematic Evaluation of Different Fresh Cow Monitoring Procedures

Author:

König Felix1ORCID,Hancock Andrew2,Wunderlich Christian3ORCID,Klawitter Marcus3ORCID,Breuer Thomas3,Simoni Anne1,Weimar Karina1,Drillich Marc1ORCID,Iwersen Michael14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University Clinic for Ruminants, Clinical Unit for Herd Health Management in Ruminants, University of Veterinary Medicine, 1210 Vienna, Austria

2. Zoetis International, D18 T3Y1 Dublin, Ireland

3. Zoetis Germany GmbH, 10785 Berlin, Germany

4. FFoQSI GmbH—Austrian Competence Centre for Feed and Food Quality, Safety and Innovation, Technopark 1D, 3430 Tulln, Austria

Abstract

Establishing fresh cow monitoring procedures is considered beneficial for cow health, welfare, and productivity. However, they are time consuming and require the cows to be locked up, which restricts their natural behavior. In this study, different fresh cow monitoring procedures were evaluated. Two experiments were conducted to determine: (1) the duration of various examinations and treatments; (2) the time cows remain locked up in headlocks; and (3) the proportion of examination and treatment times relative to the total headlock time. In advance, standard operating procedures were established. Three veterinarians conducted the examinations and treatments based on changes in milk yield, clinical symptoms, and alarms by an accelerometer system. The headlock time was evaluated for three workflow strategies, which differed in the order of examinations and treatments. To determine the duration, cameras were installed, and the video footage was analyzed. The examinations lasted between 1 and 227 s, and the cows were locked up in headlocks between 0.01 and 1.76 h. The lock-up times differed significantly among the three strategies, as well as the proportion. This study provides information that can be used as a basis for the development of time-efficient strategies, and to minimize the impact on cows’ time budgets.

Funder

Austrian Competence Centre for Feed and Food Quality, Safety and Innovation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference31 articles.

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4. Invited review: Lying time and the welfare of dairy cows;Tucker;J. Dairy Sci.,2021

5. Cook, N.B. (2008, January 12). Time budgets for dairy cows: How does cow comfort influence health, reproduction and productivity?. Proceedings of the Penn State Dairy Cattle Nutrition Workshop, Grantville, GA, USA.

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