Impacts of the loss of environmental enrichment on grazing beef cattle

Author(s)
Monk, Jessica E
Lee, Caroline
Lea, Jim
Kalinowski, Troy
Belson, Sue
Dyall, Tim
Campbell, Dana
Dickson, Emily Jane
Publication Date
2024-01-30
Abstract
The aim was to investigate the effects of enrichment loss (specifically a grooming brush) on the behaviour and stress response of cattle when housed at pasture.<br> Angus steers (n = 48) were housed at pasture in 8 groups (n = 6 /group) and tested over 2 cohorts. Cattle were provided with access to a grooming brush for 3 weeks, before access will be denied for a period of 7 days, using sheep panels to block access. Animals were then allowed access for up to 7 days to observe any rebound effects. Measures taken over the duration of the experiment include standing/lying time and number of steps (obtained automatically using IceQubes), coat cleanliness, ADG, and faecal cortisol concentrations (at least weekly, when cattle were health-check in nearby yards). Live behavioural observations consisted of four consecutive four-hour sessions a week - 2 in the morning (Cohort 1: 6:30-10:30; Cohort 2: 07:00-11:00) and 2 in the afternoon (Cohort 1: 15:45-19:45; Cohort 2: 15:00-19:00).
Link
Language
en
Publisher
University of New England
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International
Title
Impacts of the loss of environmental enrichment on grazing beef cattle
Type of document
Dataset
Entity Type
Publication

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