| Literature DB >> 32859980 |
Margret L Wenker1,2, Eddie A M Bokkers2, Benjamin Lecorps1, Marina A G von Keyserlingk1, Cornelis G van Reenen2,3, Cynthia M Verwer4, Daniel M Weary5.
Abstract
Early cow-calf separation prevents much of cows' natural maternal behaviour. Early separation is thought to prevent the development of a cow-calf bond. To assess this bond, we measured motivation of dairy cows to reunite with their calf. To vary the degree of bonding, some cows were allowed continued contact with their calf and others were separated from their calf soon after birth, following standard practice on most farms. Among cows allowed continued contact, some were able to suckle their calf and others were prevented from suckling (by covering the cow's udder with an udder net). Cows were habituated to the weighted-gate apparatus before calving by daily training with the (un-weighted) gate. After calving, cow willingness to use the gate was assessed by determining if she would push open the gate to access to her own calf. Testing occurred once daily, with weight on the gate gradually increased. After passing through the gate, the dam's calf-directed behaviour was recorded. Suckled cows pushed a greater maximum weight (45.8 ± 7.8 kg) than separated cows (21.6 ± 6.7 kg) and non-suckled cows (24.3 ± 4.5 kg), with no differences between separated and non-suckled cows. Once reunited, latency to make nose contact and duration of licking did not differ between treatments. We conclude that motivation for calf contact is greater for cows that are suckled.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32859980 PMCID: PMC7455555 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-70927-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Cow motivation to reunite with their calf, and behaviours expressed upon reuniting, in relation to treatment; nightly cow-calf contact was allowed for non-suckled and suckled cows, but separated cows only spent time with their calf during the test. Results are shown separately for maximum weight (kg) pushed by dairy cows to reunite with their own calf (A), and for those cases in which the cow successfully opened the gate, latency (sqrt(s)) to contact the calf (B) and time (sqrt(s)) spent licking the calf (C). Values for each calf are shown separately (as black circles), with median values shown as a solid line. (A) Shows 11 cows in the separated treatment, versus 10 cows in the non-suckled and 11 in the suckled treatment. One of the four cows in the separated treatment that failed to open the weighted gate in test phase (i.e. appearing as 0 kg pushed in the plot), also failed to open the gate during the second training phase and on this basis was excluded from our statistical analysis. Measures of how cows interacted with their calves during the test session [i.e. latency to approach the calf (B) and time spent licking the calf (C)] are only available for the cows that actually opened the weighted gate during the test session, resulting in a sample size of 7 for the separated treatment, versus 10 cows in the non-suckled and 11 in the suckled treatment.