The application of virtual fencing technology effectively herds cattle and sheep

Title
The application of virtual fencing technology effectively herds cattle and sheep
Publication Date
2021-03-30
Author(s)
Campbell, D L M
Lea, J M
Marini, D
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1082-6848
Email: dmarini2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:dmarini2
Keshavarzi, H
Dyall, T R
Lee, C
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Place of publication
Australia
DOI
10.1071/AN20525
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/69453
Abstract

Context. Herding and mustering procedures during livestock management can be time-consuming, labour intensive, and costly. The ability to gather animals virtually is an enticing notion but technology to do this is not widely commercially available.

Aims. The eShepherd® virtual fencing system being developed for cattle may be able to remotely herd animals. This system operates via global positioning system, and requires animals to wear a neckband device. Animals are trained to associate an audio tone with an electrical pulse to avoid a virtual boundary.

Methods. Experiments were conducted with cattle using pre-commercial prototypes of the automated virtual fencing neckbands, and with sheep using manually operated dog training collars implementing the same virtual fencing algorithm to explore the potential of this technology for herding, and optimal fence designs for herding success. In the first experiment, five groups of 12 cattle were moved down a 344 m paddock using three different fence placement designs.

Results. The most successful design for cattle herding was a back fence that followed behind the animals to prevent them from turning back in the wrong direction. The fences were manually activated by personnel based on the cattle movement. The same type of fence design was manually applied to two groups of six sheep to successfully herd them down a 140 m paddock in the second experiment

Conclusions.All herding was highly dependent on the animal’s own pace of movement as no signals were applied to ‘push’ the animals, the systems only prevented movement back in the wrong direction. The pre-commercial prototype of the automated eShepherd® device used is now obsolete and testing with updated versions would be needed to confirm its application for animal herding.

Implications. These preliminary trials indicate potential for virtual fencing technology to herd livestock, but technology improvements are required, and an automated device for sheep is not yet available.

Link
Citation
Animal Production Science, 61(13), p. 1393-1402
ISSN
1836-5787
1836-0939
Start page
1393
End page
1402
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink