Abstract
Simple SummaryBody condition scoring is a valuable tool used to assess the changes in subcutaneous body tissue reserves of dairy cows throughout the lactation. A visual method is typically used to assign a body condition score (BCS) to a cow following a standardized scale based on an assessment of tissue cover in the hind quarters of the animal. This method is subject to operator bias and is labor intensive, limiting the number of animals that can be scored and frequency of measurement. The objective of this study was to evaluate the suitability of an automated 3D body condition scoring camera system with capability to measure BCS daily as an alternative to visual body condition scoring for research applications. We found that the camera system using raw data greatly increased precision and ability to detect changes in BCS within dairy cows over time compared with the visual method assessed weekly. For research applications, the precision and sensitivity were further improved by a proposed refinement of the camera’s daily BCS data.Body condition scoring is a valuable tool used to assess the changes in subcutaneous tissue reserves of dairy cows throughout the lactation resulting from changes to management or nutritional interventions. A subjective visual method is typically used to assign a body condition score (BCS) to a cow following a standardized scale, but this method is subject to operator bias and is labor intensive, limiting the number of animals that can be scored and frequency of measurement. An automated three-dimensional body condition scoring camera system is commercially available (DeLaval Body Condition Scoring, BCS DeLaval International AB, Tumba, Sweden), but the reliability of the BCS data for research applications is still unknown, as the system’s sensitivity to change in BCS over time within cows has yet to be investigated. The objective of this study was to evaluate the suitability of an automated body condition scoring system for dairy cows for research applications as an alternative to visual body condition scoring. Thirty-two multiparous Holstein-Friesian cows (9 ± 6.8 days in milk) were body condition scored visually by three trained staff weekly and automatically twice each day by the camera for at least 7 consecutive weeks. Measurements were performed in early lactation, when the greatest differences in BCS of a cow over the lactation are normally present, and changes in BCS occur rapidly compared with later stages, allowing for detectable changes in a short timeframe by each method. Two data sets were obtained from the automatic body condition scoring camera: (1) raw daily BCS camera values and (2) a refined data set obtained from the raw daily BCS camera data by fitting a robust smooth loess function to identify and remove outliers. Agreement, precision, and sensitivity properties of the three data sets (visual, raw, and refined camera BCS) were compared in terms of the weekly average for each cow. Sensitivity was estimated as the ratio of response to precision, providing an objective performance criterion for independent comparison of methods. The camera body condition scoring method, using raw or refined camera data, performed better on this criterion compared with the visual method. Sensitivities of the raw BCS camera method, the refined BCS camera method, and the visual BCS method for changes in weekly mean score were 3.6, 6.2, and 1.7, respectively. To detect a change in BCS of an animal, assuming a decline of about 0.2 BCS (1–8 scale) per month, as was observed on average in this experiment, it would take around 44 days with the visual method, 21 days with the raw camera method, or 12 days with the refined camera method. This represents an increased capacity of both camera methods to detect changes in BCS over time compared with the visual method, which improved further when raw camera data were refined as per our proposed method. We recommend the use of the proposed refinement of the camera’s daily BCS data for research applications.
Highlights
Body condition of dairy cows is an indirect indicator of their subcutaneous body reserves status
Depletion of body reserves in dairy cows normally occurs in early lactation, and accretion occurs towards the end of the lactation [1]
Visual body condition scoring consists of a visual evaluation of anatomical points from the rear-end of the dairy cow, where changes in subcutaneous body reserves are visually more evident, to assign a score according to a standardized scale
Summary
Body condition of dairy cows is an indirect indicator of their subcutaneous body reserves status. Assessing and managing the rate of change in body condition and achieving optimum body condition at different stages of lactation are key factors for maintaining or improving performance and welfare of dairy cows. Visual body condition scoring consists of a visual evaluation of anatomical points from the rear-end of the dairy cow (e.g., hooks and tail-head area), where changes in subcutaneous body reserves are visually more evident, to assign a score according to a standardized scale. This technique includes operator subjectivity as well as requiring the animal to be restrained in some cases during the evaluation process
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