12 results on '"Langford, F. M."'
Search Results
2. Factors Influencing Spawning and Pairing in the Scale Worm Harmothoe imbricata (Annelida: Polychaeta)
- Author
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Watson, G. J., Langford, F. M., Gaudron, S. M., and Bentley, M. G.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Organic dairy cow management and indicators of energy balance
- Author
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Rutherford, K. M. D., primary, Langford, F. M., additional, Jack, M. C., additional, Sherwood, L., additional, Lawrence, A. B., additional, and Haskell, M. J., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The effect of organic status and management practices on somatic cell counts on uK dairy farms.
- Author
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Haskell, M. J., Langford, F. M., Jack, M. C., Sherwood, L., Lawrence, A. B., and Rutherford, K. M. D.
- Subjects
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FARM management , *DAIRY farms , *ORGANIC farming , *COWS , *DAIRY cattle , *SOMATIC cells , *ANIMAL health - Abstract
The numbers of organic dairy farms are increasing in the United Kingdom and in other parts of the world. On organic farms, the use of veterinary medicines is restricted. Because of this, there is concern that cow health is poorer on these farms. As udder health is primarily maintained by the use of antimicrobials, the effect of organic status on mastitis and somatic cell counts (SCC) is important to investigate. The aim of this study was therefore to determine whether the organic status and other management factors affect SCC. A group of 80 dairy farms was used in the study: 40 organic farms and 40 nonorganic farms. The farms were recruited in pairs, and each organic:nonorganic pair was matched for herd size, housing type, genetic merit for milk production and geographical location. Somatic cell count data were extracted from national databases for a standard year (2004), and analyzed using stepwise logistic regression models. The organic status of the farm did not appear in the final model, indicating no major influence of organic status on SCC. There were, however, several effects of management on SCC. Somatic cell counts were lower on farms where the udders were not cleaned or cleaned only when dirty. Somatic cell counts were also lower on farms that kept cows in larger management groups and where the majority, but not all cases of mastitis are treated with antimicrobials. It can be concluded that the control measures used on the organic farms in this study are at least as effective as those used on nonorganic farms in controlling SCC. Other management factors are influential and attention to these factors will allow farmers to reduce SCC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
5. Hock Injury Prevalence and Associated Risk Factors on Organic and Nonorganic Dairy Farms in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Rutherford, K. M. D., Langford, F. M., Jack, M. C., Sherwood, L., Lawrence, A. B., and Haskell, M. J.
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WOUNDS & injuries , *DAIRY cattle , *DAIRY farms , *FARM management - Abstract
The presence of hock injury was assessed in the milking herds of 80 dairy farms (40 organic, 40 nonorganic) across the United Kingdom. A wide range of information on farm management and husbandry was gathered via interview to assess the factors contributing to hock damage for all 80 farms, and a comprehensive building appraisal was conducted for 40 farms visited during the winter housing period. The prevalence of hock lesions was lower on organic compared with nonorganic farms (37.2 vs. 49.1%). Prevalence of hock damage was greater in the spring than fall (59.9 vs. 21.6%) and cows housed in free-stalls had a greater prevalence of hock lesions than those housed on straw (46.0 vs. 25.0%). Prevalence of hock damage increased with lactation number. In the analysis of fall/spring data, the age first mated, herd biosecurity, duration of summer grazing, and cow milk yield were significant factors relating to herd hock damage. Larger herds had a greater proportion of cows with hock swellings. Farms with a shorter calving interval had more cows with hock swellings. Factors relating to housing conditions that were positively associated with the prevalence of hock damage were low feed face space per cow, inferior passageway cleanliness, low total standing area per cow, and the type of bedding added to the free-stall. To assess whether free-stall versus straw-pen or organic versus nonorganic farms had different sets of risk factors, the data were reanalyzed for these types separately. For the straw-pen farms a high culling rate was associated with more hock damage. Within nonorganic farms, the length of summer grazing was significant, with longer periods meaning less hock injury. The prevalence of hock injuries on many UK farms, both organic and nonorganic, exceeded levels that are deemed acceptable for cow comfort. Efforts are needed to improve housing standards to reduce the prevalence of hock injury and consequently improve cow welfare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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- View/download PDF
6. Antibiotic Resistance in Gut Bacteria from Dairy Calves: A Dose Response to the Level of Antibiotics Fed in Milk.
- Author
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Langford, F. M., Weary, Dan M., and Fisher, L.
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CATTLE , *DAIRY industry , *DAIRY farming , *DAIRY products industry , *MILK - Abstract
Dairy calves are commonly fed milk from cows treated with antibiotics. The concentration of β-lactam antibiotic residues found in milk from treated cows was used to determine the range of concentrations of penicillin used in a dose-regulated experiment. Thirty-one Holstein calves were randomly assigned to milk with penicillin G added at concentrations of 0, 6.25, 12.5, 25, and 50 µl/kg. Fecal swabs were taken from each calf twice weekly. Resistance to penicillin was tested by measuring the zone of inhibition in bacterial growth around a disk impregnated with the antibiotic. Inhibition was greatest for bacteria from calves fed milk with no penicillin (2.89 ± 0.14 mm), and declined as the penicillin dose provided in the milk increased (to a low of 0.70 ± 0.10 for the 50 µl/kg treatment group). In conclusion, resistance of gut bacteria to antibiotics increases with increasing concentrations of penicillin in the milk fed to dairy calves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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7. Culled early or culled late: economic decisions and risks to welfare in dairy cows.
- Author
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Langford, F. M. and Stott, A. W.
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CULLING of dairy cattle ,DAIRY farmers ,ANIMAL welfare ,COWS ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
The article studies alternatives to involuntary culling (IC) of cows before the cows are ready to cull. The reasons why dairy farmers employ IC is to prevent infertility, mastitis and lameness. The authors claim that the reasons for IC have different age profiles and costs when they impact cows and their value at the market. They believe that IC reduces cow welfare and affect the decision to replace cows. The farmer's decision on when to cull the cow does not coincide with the cow's readiness.
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- 2012
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8. Is sleep in animals affected by prior waking experiences?
- Author
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Langford, F. M. and Cockram, M. S.
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SLEEP-wake cycle ,ANIMAL welfare ,ANIMAL behavior ,ANIMAL social behavior ,CIRCADIAN rhythms - Abstract
The article discusses a study on the changes of mental state observable in the periods of sleep and wakefulness in animals and their significance for animal welfare. It examines the electrophysiological characteristics of sleep in animals and the effects of aversive experiences on their lying and resting behaviour. The study suggests the potential of sleep measurement as a valuable tool in the assessment of animal welfare.
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- 2010
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9. The effect of the provision of ?furniture? on the use of a loafing area by continuously housed dairy cattle
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Haskell, M J, Bain, S, Roberts, D J, and Langford, F M
- Published
- 2010
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10. The effect of lameness prevalence on technical efficiency at the dairy farm level: An adjusted data envelopment analysis approach.
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Barnes, A. P., Rutherford, K. M. D., Langford, F. M., and Haskell, M. J.
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LAMENESS in cattle , *DAIRY farms , *DAIRY farming , *MILK yield , *FARM management - Abstract
A key indicator of resource use within farming is technical efficiency, which measures the amount of physical output attainable from a given set of inputs. The social aspects, in particular the treatment of animals, have generally been ignored within these measurement schemas. In addition, animal welfare will affect the production technology under which farms operate, and some allowance for this is needed within the measurement approach. This is the first paper to apply animal welfare as a discriminating technology within a technical efficiency framework. Using results from an animal welfare monitoring study coupled with resource usage data, it presents an adjusted measure of technical efficiency applied to a sample of British dairy farms and compares differences in lameness management strategies for herds. We employ both a categorical and nondiscretionary variant of the data envelopment analysis approach to measure technical efficiencies and adjust for various degrees of lameness prevalence among these farms. This paper finds that farms with low rates of lameness (below 10% of the cattle herd) tend to have significantly higher technical efficiencies than those with lameness rates of above 10% of the herd. Farms that have levels of lameness of between 10 to 20% of the herd and higher levels of lameness (above 20% of the herd) did not differ significantly. Furthermore, low lameness farms are inefficient in terms of labor and stocking density, but this is outweighed by the gain in milk yield obtained on these farms. Consequently, we argue for a whole-farm, rather than a partial indicator, approach to assessing efficiency when noneconomic factors such as lameness are accounted for. From a policy perspective, we support programs that encourage active lameness management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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11. Current trends in British dairy management regimens.
- Author
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March, M. D., Haskell, M. J., Chagunda, M. G. G., Langford, F. M., and Roberts, D. J.
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DAIRY farmers , *DAIRY industry research , *ANIMAL herds , *GRAZING , *CATTLE housing - Abstract
This paper presents a summary of results from a 2012 survey that investigated feeding and housing management regimens currently adopted by dairy farmers in Britain. Responses from 863 farms provide a snapshot of dairy industry structure and a description of the range of management systems currently in operation. Outcomes highlight a diversity of management practices, showing that 31% of farms maintained a traditional grazing system with no forage feeding indoors during the summer, whereas 38% of farmers indicated that all their milking cows received some feeding indoors during the summer. A system of housing dairy cows for 24 h/d while they are lactating was implemented by 8% of farms, whereas 1% of farms did not house their cows at any time of the year. Statistical analyses were carried out on 3 distinct groups identified from survey responses: (1) farmers who did not undertake any indoor feeding during the summer; (2) farmers who fed all their milking cows indoors during the summer; and (3) farmers who continuously housed their cows for 24 h/d while lactating. Results showed a significant relationship between management type and herd size, and between management type and breed type; on average, herd sizes were larger within systems that feed indoors. No significant relationship was found between management type and farm location when classified by estimated grassland productivity. The results indicate that traditional all-summer grazing is no longer the predominant system adopted by dairy farmers and that other systems such as all-year-round indoor feeding and continuous housing are becoming more prevalent in Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Behavior of cows during and after peak feeding time on organic and conventional dairy farms in the United Kingdom.
- Author
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Langford FM, Rutherford KM, Sherwood L, Jack MC, Lawrence AB, and Haskell MJ
- Subjects
- Animal Husbandry, Animal Welfare, Animals, Crowding, Female, Housing, Animal, Lactation, Time Factors, United Kingdom, Aggression, Cattle psychology, Dairying methods, Feeding Behavior, Organic Agriculture, Posture
- Abstract
The behavior of groups of housed, lactating dairy cattle was observed over 2 winter housing periods on 20 organic farms and 20 conventional farms in the United Kingdom. Three methods were used: (1) 6 video-clips of 10 min duration were captured of cows feeding at sections of the feed-bunk face during the peak feeding period (0 to 90 min) and continuously observed for aggressive interactions among cows; (2) the proportion of cows at the feed-bunk face was scanned every 15 min for 4.5h to include the peak feeding period (0 to 255 min); and (3) all nonfeeding behaviors were scanned every 15 min for 2.5h after the peak feeding period (120 to 255 min). The latter scans were analyzed post hoc for measures of cow comfort (freestall farms only). Management and health data were collected on each farm. On farms with open-fronted feed-bunk faces, a greater number of aggressive interactions occurred at the feed-bunk face at peak feeding time on organic farms than on conventional farms (organic = 36.3 ± 4.4; conventional = 29.1 ± 3.0). Higher proportions of cows were at the feed-bunk face at peak feeding on organic farms than on conventional farms (organic=0.58 ± 0.04; conventional=0.48 ± 0.03). Housing type (freestall versus straw pen) explained most differences in postfeeding behavior (proportion of ruminating cow in alleyways: freestalls=0.16±0.06 vs. straw-pen=0.08 ± 0.03), with few differences between organic and conventional herds. On freestall farms, the proportions of cows on organic farms lying down postfeeding was smaller than in conventional herds (organic=0.38 ± 0.09 vs. conventional=0.43 ± 0.07). Differences in behavior around peak feeding time could be associated with the reduction in food "quality" on organic farms compared with the energy requirement of the cows, with cows on organic farms being highly motivated to feed. A correlation was observed between farms that had high amounts of lying and farms that had high lameness prevalence (R(2)=55.3), suggesting a complex relationship between comfort and pain. Overall, the behavior of dairy cows on organic farms was not different from that of conventionally reared cows, and the results suggest that most behavioral welfare problems relating to housing could be alleviated by management practices., (Copyright © 2011 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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