Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid

If you keep cattle in a herd outside all year round on big varying grounds, their possibility to perform their natural behaviour increases. This way of keeping cattle requires that you provide them with their other needs, like shelter and a dry and clean resting place. According to the animal welfar...

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Main Author: Johansson, Emma
Format: First cycle, G2E
Language:Swedish
Swedish
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1488/
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author Johansson, Emma
author_browse Johansson, Emma
author_facet Johansson, Emma
author_sort Johansson, Emma
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description If you keep cattle in a herd outside all year round on big varying grounds, their possibility to perform their natural behaviour increases. This way of keeping cattle requires that you provide them with their other needs, like shelter and a dry and clean resting place. According to the animal welfare authority´s regulations on livestock farming, only animals that are suited to stay outside during the cold season are allowed to be kept outside. They should also have access to a shelter or another building that gives them protection from the weather and wind and provides a dry and clean resting place. Research has shown that as long as cattle do not get exposed to precipitation and wind they will manage low temperature well. Some of the things that will affect how well the animals handle different climates are the isolation ability of the fur, the animals´ body size and the feed intake. A dry lying place that is both insulating and moisture absorbent is also of great importance. The animals increase the time they are lying down in bad weather conditions, such as rain and wind. By lying down they save their energy and reduce their body surface, and thereby reduce the heat radiation. The purpose with this Bachelor thesis is to enhance the understanding of where a herd of suckler cows which are kept outside during winter time in the middle of Sweden, chooses to seek shelter, how they distribute their resting time over the diurnal cycle, and in wich terrain they prefer to lie. The data collection took place on a herd of 60 suckler cows in Gävleborg. The animals on the farm were mainly Hereford cross-breds of varying age. The area in which the animals were kept during the data collection period was 40 hectares large, and consisted of varied terrain. The animals had access to four shelters of the circular arc model. The data collection was conducted during two different periods (October and February) to cover various weather conditions. Eight focal animals which would carry measuring equipment were selected for each collection period that lasted 21 days each. They carried the GPS collars, which recorded the cows positions every 15 minutes around the clock during the entire period, and activity meters, which made the registrations every minute, to determine whether the animals were lying, walking or standing. A stationary weather station recorded the weather every 15 minutes. Data have been processed so that all missed GPS recordings of where the animals were, was treated as they were in a shelter due to that the GPS collars often have difficulties to get satellite contact under a tin roof. However, this can give a too high number of recordings of staying in the shelter, and therefore we call this variable "shelter + missed". This study shows that suckler cows that were kept outside during October and February in the middle of Sweden were lying down approximately one third of the day and that they appeared to be lying down as much as in the "shelter+missing" as in the natural protection. Approximately one third of the time, the suckler cows spent in open terrain. The area that the animals spent the most time after the open terrain was the "shelter+missing". Almost as much time that was spent in the "shelter+missing" (19,3%) was spent even in the dense spruce forest (16,6%). In the sparse wood the suckler cows were standing (50,7%) and lying (49,3%) about the same, while they were standing (80,3%) much more than they were lying (19,7%) in the dense forest. The "shelter+missing" was the protection that differed the most from the other protection areas because the animals were lying down significantly more (65,3%) than they were standing (34,7%). During 83,8% of the time the suckler cows were recorded in some sort of protection when they were lying down at night. The suckler cows were lying 2,4% at night, 8,8% during dawn-dusk and 6,6% during the day. The conclusion is that the suckler cows that were kept outside during the winter time in this herd were lying mostly at night, that this happened mostly in protected areas, and that the shelters seemed to be a protection they used.
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spelling RepoSLU14882012-04-20T14:14:19Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1488/ Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid Johansson, Emma Agricultural structures Animal husbandry If you keep cattle in a herd outside all year round on big varying grounds, their possibility to perform their natural behaviour increases. This way of keeping cattle requires that you provide them with their other needs, like shelter and a dry and clean resting place. According to the animal welfare authority´s regulations on livestock farming, only animals that are suited to stay outside during the cold season are allowed to be kept outside. They should also have access to a shelter or another building that gives them protection from the weather and wind and provides a dry and clean resting place. Research has shown that as long as cattle do not get exposed to precipitation and wind they will manage low temperature well. Some of the things that will affect how well the animals handle different climates are the isolation ability of the fur, the animals´ body size and the feed intake. A dry lying place that is both insulating and moisture absorbent is also of great importance. The animals increase the time they are lying down in bad weather conditions, such as rain and wind. By lying down they save their energy and reduce their body surface, and thereby reduce the heat radiation. The purpose with this Bachelor thesis is to enhance the understanding of where a herd of suckler cows which are kept outside during winter time in the middle of Sweden, chooses to seek shelter, how they distribute their resting time over the diurnal cycle, and in wich terrain they prefer to lie. The data collection took place on a herd of 60 suckler cows in Gävleborg. The animals on the farm were mainly Hereford cross-breds of varying age. The area in which the animals were kept during the data collection period was 40 hectares large, and consisted of varied terrain. The animals had access to four shelters of the circular arc model. The data collection was conducted during two different periods (October and February) to cover various weather conditions. Eight focal animals which would carry measuring equipment were selected for each collection period that lasted 21 days each. They carried the GPS collars, which recorded the cows positions every 15 minutes around the clock during the entire period, and activity meters, which made the registrations every minute, to determine whether the animals were lying, walking or standing. A stationary weather station recorded the weather every 15 minutes. Data have been processed so that all missed GPS recordings of where the animals were, was treated as they were in a shelter due to that the GPS collars often have difficulties to get satellite contact under a tin roof. However, this can give a too high number of recordings of staying in the shelter, and therefore we call this variable "shelter + missed". This study shows that suckler cows that were kept outside during October and February in the middle of Sweden were lying down approximately one third of the day and that they appeared to be lying down as much as in the "shelter+missing" as in the natural protection. Approximately one third of the time, the suckler cows spent in open terrain. The area that the animals spent the most time after the open terrain was the "shelter+missing". Almost as much time that was spent in the "shelter+missing" (19,3%) was spent even in the dense spruce forest (16,6%). In the sparse wood the suckler cows were standing (50,7%) and lying (49,3%) about the same, while they were standing (80,3%) much more than they were lying (19,7%) in the dense forest. The "shelter+missing" was the protection that differed the most from the other protection areas because the animals were lying down significantly more (65,3%) than they were standing (34,7%). During 83,8% of the time the suckler cows were recorded in some sort of protection when they were lying down at night. The suckler cows were lying 2,4% at night, 8,8% during dawn-dusk and 6,6% during the day. The conclusion is that the suckler cows that were kept outside during the winter time in this herd were lying mostly at night, that this happened mostly in protected areas, and that the shelters seemed to be a protection they used. 2010-06-29 First cycle, G2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1488/1/johansson_e_100629.pdf Johansson, Emma, 2009. Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid . First cycle, G2E. Skara: (VH) > Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-880.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-3-69 swe
spellingShingle Agricultural structures
Animal husbandry
Johansson, Emma
Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title_full Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title_fullStr Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title_full_unstemmed Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title_short Val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
title_sort val av liggplats och väderskydd hos dikor vid utedrift vintertid
topic Agricultural structures
Animal husbandry
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1488/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1488/