Some effects of housing on the social behaviour of dairy cows
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Science
- Vol. 53 (3), 271-278
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003356100020262
Abstract
A herd of high-yielding Friesian dairy cows was observed outdoors and in a modern cubicle house. Indoors there was a much higher level of gross agonistic behaviour than at pasture (9·5 v. 1·1 per h). Furthermore, the use of continuous filming showed a high level of avoidance amongst the cows which impeded the movement of the more submissive cows. All cows spent proportionately 0·34 to 0·56 of their time indoors watching one another and 0·45 to 0·66 of their time in ‘social tension’. There was less synchrony of behaviour indoors than at pasture and despite the presence of one Calan Broadbent stall for each cow there was a high rate of displacement from the stalls involving cows of all degrees of dominance. The results are discussed in relation to housing design and husbandry practice.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chillingham cattle: social and maintenance behaviour in an ungulate that breeds all year roundAnimal Behaviour, 1989
- The notion of ethological ‘need’, models of motivation and animal welfareAnimal Behaviour, 1988
- Crowding phenomena in dairy cows as related to available idling space in a cubicle housing systemApplied Animal Behaviour Science, 1984
- Synchronization of behaviour in grazing cattleApplied Animal Ethology, 1982
- Cohesive Relationships in a Cattle Herd (Bos Indicus)Behaviour, 1981
- Ethology of Free Ranging Domestic AnimalsJournal of Range Management, 1979
- Animal Welfare in Modern AgricultureBritish Veterinary Journal, 1973
- On the dominance order in Friesian‐Dutch dairy cows1Zeitschrift für Tierzüchtung und Züchtungsbiologie, 1967
- CYGLE ANNUEL ET COMPORTEMENT SOCIAL DU TAUREAU DE CAMARGUEMammalia, 1958