Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows

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Standard

Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows. / Hansson, Ida; Silvera, A.; Ren, Keni; Woudstra, Svenja; Skarin, Anna; Fikse, Freddy; Nielsen, Per Peetz; Rönnegård, Lars.

I: Journal of Dairy Science, Bind 106, Nr. 4, 2023, s. 2685-2699.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hansson, I, Silvera, A, Ren, K, Woudstra, S, Skarin, A, Fikse, F, Nielsen, PP & Rönnegård, L 2023, 'Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows', Journal of Dairy Science, bind 106, nr. 4, s. 2685-2699. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-21915

APA

Hansson, I., Silvera, A., Ren, K., Woudstra, S., Skarin, A., Fikse, F., Nielsen, P. P., & Rönnegård, L. (2023). Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows. Journal of Dairy Science, 106(4), 2685-2699. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-21915

Vancouver

Hansson I, Silvera A, Ren K, Woudstra S, Skarin A, Fikse F o.a. Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows. Journal of Dairy Science. 2023;106(4):2685-2699. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-21915

Author

Hansson, Ida ; Silvera, A. ; Ren, Keni ; Woudstra, Svenja ; Skarin, Anna ; Fikse, Freddy ; Nielsen, Per Peetz ; Rönnegård, Lars. / Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows. I: Journal of Dairy Science. 2023 ; Bind 106, Nr. 4. s. 2685-2699.

Bibtex

@article{de20e282d1e1406e85ca33df7c6f7323,
title = "Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows",
abstract = "In modern freestall barns where large groups of cows are housed together, the behavior displayed by herd mates can influence the welfare and production of other individuals. Therefore, understanding social interactions in groups of dairy cows is important to enhance herd management and optimize the outcomes of both animal health and welfare in the future. Many factors can affect the number of social contacts in a group. This study aimed to identify which characteristics of a cow are associated with the number of contacts it has with other group members in 2 different functional areas (feeding and resting area) to increase our understanding of the social behavior of dairy cows. Inside 2 herds housed in freestall barns with around 200 lactating cows each, cow positions were recorded with an ultra-wideband real-time location system collecting all cows' positions every second over 2 wk. Using the positioning data of the cows, we quantified the number of contacts between them, assuming that cows spending time in proximity to one another (within a distance of 2.5 m for at least 10 min per day) were interacting socially. We documented in which barn areas these interactions occurred and used linear mixed models to investigate if lactation stage, parity, breed, pregnancy status, estrus, udder health, and claw health affect the number of contacts. We found variation in the number of contacts a cow had between individuals in both functional areas. Cows in later lactation had more contacts in the feeding area than cows in early lactation. Furthermore, in one herd, higher parity cows had fewer contacts in the feeding area than first parity cows, and in the other herd, cows in third parity or higher had more contacts in the resting area. This study indicates that cow characteristics such as parity and days in milk are associated with the number of contacts a cow has daily to its herd mates and provides useful information for further research on social interactions of dairy cows.",
author = "Ida Hansson and A. Silvera and Keni Ren and Svenja Woudstra and Anna Skarin and Freddy Fikse and Nielsen, {Per Peetz} and Lars R{\"o}nneg{\aa}rd",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3168/jds.2022-21915",
language = "English",
volume = "106",
pages = "2685--2699",
journal = "Journal of Dairy Science",
issn = "0022-0302",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cow characteristics associated with the variation in number of contacts between dairy cows

AU - Hansson, Ida

AU - Silvera, A.

AU - Ren, Keni

AU - Woudstra, Svenja

AU - Skarin, Anna

AU - Fikse, Freddy

AU - Nielsen, Per Peetz

AU - Rönnegård, Lars

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - In modern freestall barns where large groups of cows are housed together, the behavior displayed by herd mates can influence the welfare and production of other individuals. Therefore, understanding social interactions in groups of dairy cows is important to enhance herd management and optimize the outcomes of both animal health and welfare in the future. Many factors can affect the number of social contacts in a group. This study aimed to identify which characteristics of a cow are associated with the number of contacts it has with other group members in 2 different functional areas (feeding and resting area) to increase our understanding of the social behavior of dairy cows. Inside 2 herds housed in freestall barns with around 200 lactating cows each, cow positions were recorded with an ultra-wideband real-time location system collecting all cows' positions every second over 2 wk. Using the positioning data of the cows, we quantified the number of contacts between them, assuming that cows spending time in proximity to one another (within a distance of 2.5 m for at least 10 min per day) were interacting socially. We documented in which barn areas these interactions occurred and used linear mixed models to investigate if lactation stage, parity, breed, pregnancy status, estrus, udder health, and claw health affect the number of contacts. We found variation in the number of contacts a cow had between individuals in both functional areas. Cows in later lactation had more contacts in the feeding area than cows in early lactation. Furthermore, in one herd, higher parity cows had fewer contacts in the feeding area than first parity cows, and in the other herd, cows in third parity or higher had more contacts in the resting area. This study indicates that cow characteristics such as parity and days in milk are associated with the number of contacts a cow has daily to its herd mates and provides useful information for further research on social interactions of dairy cows.

AB - In modern freestall barns where large groups of cows are housed together, the behavior displayed by herd mates can influence the welfare and production of other individuals. Therefore, understanding social interactions in groups of dairy cows is important to enhance herd management and optimize the outcomes of both animal health and welfare in the future. Many factors can affect the number of social contacts in a group. This study aimed to identify which characteristics of a cow are associated with the number of contacts it has with other group members in 2 different functional areas (feeding and resting area) to increase our understanding of the social behavior of dairy cows. Inside 2 herds housed in freestall barns with around 200 lactating cows each, cow positions were recorded with an ultra-wideband real-time location system collecting all cows' positions every second over 2 wk. Using the positioning data of the cows, we quantified the number of contacts between them, assuming that cows spending time in proximity to one another (within a distance of 2.5 m for at least 10 min per day) were interacting socially. We documented in which barn areas these interactions occurred and used linear mixed models to investigate if lactation stage, parity, breed, pregnancy status, estrus, udder health, and claw health affect the number of contacts. We found variation in the number of contacts a cow had between individuals in both functional areas. Cows in later lactation had more contacts in the feeding area than cows in early lactation. Furthermore, in one herd, higher parity cows had fewer contacts in the feeding area than first parity cows, and in the other herd, cows in third parity or higher had more contacts in the resting area. This study indicates that cow characteristics such as parity and days in milk are associated with the number of contacts a cow has daily to its herd mates and provides useful information for further research on social interactions of dairy cows.

U2 - 10.3168/jds.2022-21915

DO - 10.3168/jds.2022-21915

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36823010

VL - 106

SP - 2685

EP - 2699

JO - Journal of Dairy Science

JF - Journal of Dairy Science

SN - 0022-0302

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 337263768