Proximity Interactions in a Permanently Housed Dairy Herd: Network Structure, Consistency, and Individual Differences

被引:27
作者
Chopra, Kareemah [1 ]
Hodges, Holly R. [2 ]
Barker, Zoe E. [2 ]
Vazquez Diosdado, Jorge A. [1 ]
Amory, Jonathan R. [2 ]
Cameron, Tom C. [3 ]
Croft, Darren P. [4 ]
Bell, Nick J. [5 ]
Codling, Edward A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Essex, Dept Math Sci, Colchester, Essex, England
[2] Writtle Univ Coll, Chelmsford, Essex, England
[3] Univ Essex, Sch Life Sci, Colchester, Essex, England
[4] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Ctr Res Anim Behav, Exeter, Devon, England
[5] Royal Vet Coll, Hatfield, Herts, England
基金
英国科研创新办公室; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
animal group; animal movement; dairy cow; lameness; local positioning system (LPS); precision livestock farming (PLF); proximity interactions; social network analysis (SNA); WHITE LINE DISEASE; SOCIAL NETWORKS; MILK-YIELD; DIGITAL DERMATITIS; SICKNESS BEHAVIOR; FEEDING-BEHAVIOR; HEALTH-STATUS; LAMENESS; COWS; CATTLE;
D O I
10.3389/fvets.2020.583715
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
Understanding the herd structure of housed dairy cows has the potential to reveal preferential interactions, detect changes in behavior indicative of illness, and optimize farm management regimes. This study investigated the structure and consistency of the proximity interaction network of a permanently housed commercial dairy herd throughout October 2014, using data collected from a wireless local positioning system. Herd-level networks were determined from sustained proximity interactions (pairs of cows continuously within three meters for 60 s or longer), and assessed for social differentiation, temporal stability, and the influence of individual-level characteristics such as lameness, parity, and days in milk. We determined the level of inter-individual variation in proximity interactions across the full barn housing, and for specific functional zones within it (feeding, non-feeding). The observed networks were highly connected and temporally varied, with significant preferential assortment, and inter-individual variation in daily interactions in the non-feeding zone. We found no clear social assortment by lameness, parity, or days in milk. Our study demonstrates the potential benefits of automated tracking technology to monitor the proximity interactions of individual animals within large, commercially relevant groups of livestock.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 89 条
[81]   Lameness and lying behavior in grazing dairy cows [J].
Thompson, A. J. ;
Weary, D. M. ;
Bran, J. A. ;
Daros, R. R. ;
Hotzel, M. J. ;
von Keyserlingk, M. A. G. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2019, 102 (07) :6373-6382
[82]   Technical note: Validation of a commercial system for the continuous and automated monitoring of dairy cow activity [J].
Tullo, E. ;
Fontana, I. ;
Gottardo, D. ;
Sloth, K. H. ;
Guarino, M. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2016, 99 (09) :7489-7494
[83]   Lameness in Beef Cattle: UK Farmers' Perceptions, Knowledge, Barriers, and Approaches to Treatment and Control [J].
Tunstall, Jay ;
Mueller, Karin ;
White, Dai Grove ;
Oultram, Joanne W. H. ;
Higgins, Helen Mary .
FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE, 2019, 6
[84]   The concept of social dominance and the social distribution of feeding-related displacements between cows [J].
Val-Laillet, David ;
de Passille, Anne Marie ;
Rushen, Jeffrey ;
von Keyserlingk, Marina A. G. .
APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE, 2008, 111 (1-2) :158-172
[85]   Acute behavioral effects of regrouping dairy cows [J].
von Keyserlingk, M. A. G. ;
Olenick, D. ;
Weary, D. M. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2008, 91 (03) :1011-1016
[86]   Benchmarking cow comfort on North American freestall dairies: Lameness, leg injuries, lying time, facility design, and management for high-producing Holstein dairy cows [J].
von Keyserlingk, M. A. G. ;
Barrientos, A. ;
Ito, K. ;
Galo, E. ;
Weary, D. M. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2012, 95 (12) :7399-7408
[87]   Moderate lameness leads to marked behavioral changes in dairy cows [J].
Weigele, H. C. ;
Gygax, L. ;
Steiner, A. ;
Wechsler, B. ;
Burla, J. -B. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2018, 101 (03) :2370-2382
[88]   Social network analysis of animal behaviour: a promising tool for the study of sociality [J].
Wey, Tina ;
Blumstein, Daniel T. ;
Shen, Weiwei ;
Jordan, Ference .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2008, 75 :333-344
[89]  
Whitehead H., 2008, ANAL ANIMAL SOC QUAN, DOI DOI 10.7208/CHICAGO/9780226895246.001.0001