Abstract

Position tracking of cows within the barn environment allows for determining behavioral patterns and activities. Such data might be used for detection of estrus and disease. A newly marketed real-time location monitoring system (Smartbow, Smartbow GmbH, Weibern, Austria) was tested in this study. Cow location was continuously monitored with the Smartbow tags mounted on the cow's ear, which sends low-frequency signals to receivers further transmitting the information to a server. Through incoming data, the server triangulates the location of the cow within the barn environment in real time. The validation of the system was carried out in 4 steps. The first 2 steps served as static testing steps (tags and 1 cow positioned at 30 reference points), and steps 3 and 4 were dynamic steps with cows moving in the barn environment. For 48 h, locations of 15 cows were confirmed each hour by laser measurements performed by a team (step 3) or 1 observer (step 4). Interobserver variability was 0.83 m (range: 0.05 to 2.87 m), and intraobserver variability had a range of 0.02 to 0.31 m. In the 4 validation steps, the mean distance between observer laser measurements and Smartbow was between 1.22 and 1.80 m. Step 4, with 334 observations, resulted in a mean distance difference of 1.22 m (standard error = 1.32 m). Data can be used for development of algorithms to detect sick cows with changed behavioral patterns. Data may also be used to monitor cow responses to physical environment, potentially improving facility design. Time budgets in proximity to important barn features (i.e., feed bunk and water trough) and distances traveled can be calculated and used to identify cows in need of caretaker's attention and identify the cow's exact location in the barn.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call