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Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations

SIMPLE SUMMARY: India has the largest population of dairy cattle in the world, but little work has been done to objectively assess their welfare. Formal welfare assessment is needed to identify any welfare problems and inform solutions to these problems. Dairy cattle on 38 farms in Kerala, India, we...

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Autores principales: Mullan, Siobhan, Bunglavan, Surej J., Rowe, Elizabeth, Barrett, David C., Lee, Michael R. F., Ananth, Deepa, Tarlton, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7222708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32244333
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10040586
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author Mullan, Siobhan
Bunglavan, Surej J.
Rowe, Elizabeth
Barrett, David C.
Lee, Michael R. F.
Ananth, Deepa
Tarlton, John
author_facet Mullan, Siobhan
Bunglavan, Surej J.
Rowe, Elizabeth
Barrett, David C.
Lee, Michael R. F.
Ananth, Deepa
Tarlton, John
author_sort Mullan, Siobhan
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: India has the largest population of dairy cattle in the world, but little work has been done to objectively assess their welfare. Formal welfare assessment is needed to identify any welfare problems and inform solutions to these problems. Dairy cattle on 38 farms in Kerala, India, were observed using standardised welfare assessment protocols. The major welfare problems identified in this study were that all cows were tied to their housing on a rope < 1 m that attached to a halter that pierced the nasal septum, most farms did not provide cattle with unlimited access to water, and access to food was also limited. On half the farms, cattle were tied up inside for the whole day, and most of those given outdoor access were also tied when outside. These results show the need to encourage dairy farmers in India to stop tying their cattle, and to provide them with unlimited access to drinking water and a readier supply of a good healthy diet. Welfare assessment protocols were used successfully in this study, suggesting that they can and should be used regularly to assess cattle welfare in India. Making these changes could substantially improve the welfare of tens of millions of cattle. ABSTRACT: India has the largest population of dairy cattle in the world at over 48 million animals, yet there has been little formal assessment of their welfare reported. Through observations of dairy cows on 38 farms in Kerala, India, we aimed to investigate the welfare of these animals and the practicality of animal-based assessments within common farming systems. Substantial welfare challenges were identified. All cows were close-tied (less than 1 m length) via a halter that pierced the nasal septum when housed, which was for the entire day (50% of farms) or part thereof. When outside access was available, it was also usually restricted by close-tying, longline tether, or hobbling. Ad libitum water was only available on 22% of farms and food access was also restricted (mean of 4.3 h/day). Future work should focus on encouraging dairy farmers in India to improve the welfare of their dairy cattle by: ceasing to tie and tether cattle (or at least providing tied and tethered cattle with exercise opportunities); providing unlimited access to drinking water and a readier supply of food (especially quality green forage/fodder); cleaning housing more frequently; providing strategies to prevent heat stress; breeding cattle suited to environmental conditions and with increased resistance to heat stress; and carrying out welfare assessments more regularly using a validated protocol and rectifying the causes of poor welfare. Such changes could substantially improve the welfare of tens of millions of cattle.
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spelling pubmed-72227082020-05-18 Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations Mullan, Siobhan Bunglavan, Surej J. Rowe, Elizabeth Barrett, David C. Lee, Michael R. F. Ananth, Deepa Tarlton, John Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: India has the largest population of dairy cattle in the world, but little work has been done to objectively assess their welfare. Formal welfare assessment is needed to identify any welfare problems and inform solutions to these problems. Dairy cattle on 38 farms in Kerala, India, were observed using standardised welfare assessment protocols. The major welfare problems identified in this study were that all cows were tied to their housing on a rope < 1 m that attached to a halter that pierced the nasal septum, most farms did not provide cattle with unlimited access to water, and access to food was also limited. On half the farms, cattle were tied up inside for the whole day, and most of those given outdoor access were also tied when outside. These results show the need to encourage dairy farmers in India to stop tying their cattle, and to provide them with unlimited access to drinking water and a readier supply of a good healthy diet. Welfare assessment protocols were used successfully in this study, suggesting that they can and should be used regularly to assess cattle welfare in India. Making these changes could substantially improve the welfare of tens of millions of cattle. ABSTRACT: India has the largest population of dairy cattle in the world at over 48 million animals, yet there has been little formal assessment of their welfare reported. Through observations of dairy cows on 38 farms in Kerala, India, we aimed to investigate the welfare of these animals and the practicality of animal-based assessments within common farming systems. Substantial welfare challenges were identified. All cows were close-tied (less than 1 m length) via a halter that pierced the nasal septum when housed, which was for the entire day (50% of farms) or part thereof. When outside access was available, it was also usually restricted by close-tying, longline tether, or hobbling. Ad libitum water was only available on 22% of farms and food access was also restricted (mean of 4.3 h/day). Future work should focus on encouraging dairy farmers in India to improve the welfare of their dairy cattle by: ceasing to tie and tether cattle (or at least providing tied and tethered cattle with exercise opportunities); providing unlimited access to drinking water and a readier supply of food (especially quality green forage/fodder); cleaning housing more frequently; providing strategies to prevent heat stress; breeding cattle suited to environmental conditions and with increased resistance to heat stress; and carrying out welfare assessments more regularly using a validated protocol and rectifying the causes of poor welfare. Such changes could substantially improve the welfare of tens of millions of cattle. MDPI 2020-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7222708/ /pubmed/32244333 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10040586 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mullan, Siobhan
Bunglavan, Surej J.
Rowe, Elizabeth
Barrett, David C.
Lee, Michael R. F.
Ananth, Deepa
Tarlton, John
Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title_full Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title_fullStr Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title_full_unstemmed Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title_short Welfare Challenges of Dairy Cows in India Identified Through On-Farm Observations
title_sort welfare challenges of dairy cows in india identified through on-farm observations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7222708/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32244333
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10040586
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