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Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Rumination is important for the digestive physiology of cattle and can currently be continuously recorded by sensor technologies. Although a decrease in rumination time is associated with several disorders, it often does not lead farmers to take specific action. In this study, we mon...

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Autores principales: Simoni, Anne, Hancock, Andrew, Wunderlich, Christian, Klawitter, Marcus, Breuer, Thomas, König, Felix, Weimar, Karina, Drillich, Marc, Iwersen, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9952734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36830546
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13040759
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author Simoni, Anne
Hancock, Andrew
Wunderlich, Christian
Klawitter, Marcus
Breuer, Thomas
König, Felix
Weimar, Karina
Drillich, Marc
Iwersen, Michael
author_facet Simoni, Anne
Hancock, Andrew
Wunderlich, Christian
Klawitter, Marcus
Breuer, Thomas
König, Felix
Weimar, Karina
Drillich, Marc
Iwersen, Michael
author_sort Simoni, Anne
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Rumination is important for the digestive physiology of cattle and can currently be continuously recorded by sensor technologies. Although a decrease in rumination time is associated with several disorders, it often does not lead farmers to take specific action. In this study, we monitored rumination activity with the use of an ear-tag-based accelerometer system. To investigate the association between a decrease in rumination time and the digestive physiology of dairy cows, we compared rumen fluid characteristics between cows with accelerometer-based health alerts and matched healthy counterparts. Cows with health alerts showed greater variations in rumen fluid characteristics during the health alerts than healthy cows. ABSTRACT: Monitoring rumination activity is considered a useful indicator for the early detection of diseases and metabolic disorders. Accelerometer-based sensor systems provide health alerts based on individual thresholds of rumination times in dairy cows. Detailed knowledge of the relationship between sensor-based rumination times and rumen physiology would help detect conspicuous animals and evaluate the treatment’s success. This study aimed to investigate the association between sensor-based health alerts and rumen fluid characteristics in Holstein-Friesian cows at different stages of lactation. Rumen fluid was collected via a stomach tube from 63 pairs of cows with and without health alerts (ALRT vs NALRT). Pairs were matched based on the day of lactation, the number of lactations, and health criteria. Rumen fluid was collected during and after health alerts. The parameters of color, odor, consistency, pH, redox potential, sedimentation flotation time, and the number of protozoa were examined. Results showed differences between both groups in odor, rumen pH, sedimentation flotation time, and protozoan count at the first rumen fluid collection. Within the groups, greater variations in rumen fluid parameters were found for ALRT cows compared to NALRT cows. The interaction between health alert and stage of lactation did not affect the rumen fluid parameters.
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spelling pubmed-99527342023-02-25 Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows Simoni, Anne Hancock, Andrew Wunderlich, Christian Klawitter, Marcus Breuer, Thomas König, Felix Weimar, Karina Drillich, Marc Iwersen, Michael Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Rumination is important for the digestive physiology of cattle and can currently be continuously recorded by sensor technologies. Although a decrease in rumination time is associated with several disorders, it often does not lead farmers to take specific action. In this study, we monitored rumination activity with the use of an ear-tag-based accelerometer system. To investigate the association between a decrease in rumination time and the digestive physiology of dairy cows, we compared rumen fluid characteristics between cows with accelerometer-based health alerts and matched healthy counterparts. Cows with health alerts showed greater variations in rumen fluid characteristics during the health alerts than healthy cows. ABSTRACT: Monitoring rumination activity is considered a useful indicator for the early detection of diseases and metabolic disorders. Accelerometer-based sensor systems provide health alerts based on individual thresholds of rumination times in dairy cows. Detailed knowledge of the relationship between sensor-based rumination times and rumen physiology would help detect conspicuous animals and evaluate the treatment’s success. This study aimed to investigate the association between sensor-based health alerts and rumen fluid characteristics in Holstein-Friesian cows at different stages of lactation. Rumen fluid was collected via a stomach tube from 63 pairs of cows with and without health alerts (ALRT vs NALRT). Pairs were matched based on the day of lactation, the number of lactations, and health criteria. Rumen fluid was collected during and after health alerts. The parameters of color, odor, consistency, pH, redox potential, sedimentation flotation time, and the number of protozoa were examined. Results showed differences between both groups in odor, rumen pH, sedimentation flotation time, and protozoan count at the first rumen fluid collection. Within the groups, greater variations in rumen fluid parameters were found for ALRT cows compared to NALRT cows. The interaction between health alert and stage of lactation did not affect the rumen fluid parameters. MDPI 2023-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9952734/ /pubmed/36830546 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13040759 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Simoni, Anne
Hancock, Andrew
Wunderlich, Christian
Klawitter, Marcus
Breuer, Thomas
König, Felix
Weimar, Karina
Drillich, Marc
Iwersen, Michael
Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title_full Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title_fullStr Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title_full_unstemmed Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title_short Association between Rumination Times Detected by an Ear Tag-Based Accelerometer System and Rumen Physiology in Dairy Cows
title_sort association between rumination times detected by an ear tag-based accelerometer system and rumen physiology in dairy cows
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9952734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36830546
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13040759
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