Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5539760 Behavioural Processes 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Daily synchrony patterns in cows were observed.•Groups of cows differed in the amount of synchrony factors (feeding, milking).•Strongest synchrony was found in groups with weak synchrony factors.•Synchrony may therefore be a behavioural need for cows.

Synchrony is thought to provide fitness advantages to group-living animals, but little is known how animals maintain synchrony. We investigated intensity of synchrony factors (milking, feed-provision) in cattle herds. Intensity decreased from dairy cows milked in a parlour to cows milked by a robot to suckler cows raising calves. On 30 farms, 10 of each type, we recorded synchrony in lying and feeding. Peaks in lying synchronously were visible in the early morning, around noon, and late at night. These peaks decreased from the suckler cows to the cows milked in a parlour and to the cows milked by a robot. Complementary peaks were found for synchronous feeding. The asynchronous milking times with the milking robot decreased synchrony. Unexpectedly, the suckler cows with the weakest synchrony factors also showed a high level of synchrony. These results indicate that internal motivations for synchrony may be present in addition to external synchrony factors.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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