Abstract

Nine commerical herds were observed on three separate occasion for flight distance, i.e., how close a human can come before a stationary cow moves away, and approach distance, i.e., how close a cow will come to a stationary human. Herdsmen from each herd scored their cows on parlor behavior using a scoring system that ranged from 1 (the most docile) to 5 (the most aggressive). These three behavior factors were compared with milk production. Both mean flight distance and mean approach distance were 1.6 m. Mean parlor score was 2.2 and mean production was 9153 kg. These were significant inter-herd correlations between flight distance and approach distance ( r=0.30), flight distance and parlor score ( r=0.20), and parlor score and milk production ( r=0.08); however, only flight distance and approach distance ( r=0.18), and flight distance and parlor score ( r=0.12) were significantly correlated within herds. There was no significant intraherd correlation between milk production and any of the behavioral factors considered. These findings indicate that while parlor score is associated with milk production across herds, flight distance and approach distance are not useful indicators of milk production.

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