1. Effects of surface materials of self-draining beds on cattle behavior in a temperate climate
- Author
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Lin Li, Ping Liu, Lulu Guo, Fulan Zhang, Huaming Mao, and Gu Zhaobing
- Subjects
self-draining beds ,Bedding ,behavior ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Environment and Management ,lcsh:Animal biochemistry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Wood shavings ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Beef cattle ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Article ,bedding material ,0403 veterinary science ,Animal science ,cattle ,Bedding Material ,Temperate climate ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,lcsh:Animal culture ,lcsh:QP501-801 ,Barn (unit) ,lcsh:SF1-1100 ,Food Science - Abstract
Objective: The objective of the present experiment was to construct self-draining beds to keep surface bedding materials clean and dry for beef cattle comfort in a temperate climate.Methods: In Experiment 1, a self-draining bed was covered with sand at depths of 10 cm (S-10a), 15 cm (S-15), and 20 cm (S-20) respectively. In Experiment 2, self-draining beds of different sizes were covered with 10 cm of sand (S-10b) and wood shavings (WS) at depths of 15 cm and 20 cm (WS-15 and WS-20). Fifteen cattle were engaged to evaluate the comfort of self-draining beds covered with different bedding materials.Results: No cattle lay in the feed alley and cattle spent more time lying on S-10a than S-15 or S-20 in Experiment 1 (p0.05). In Experiment 2, no cattle selected the feed alley as the lying area. Cattle preferred WS-15 as the lying area and time spent lying on WS-20 was slightly higher than on S-10b (p
- Published
- 2020
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