Heat stress and feeding behaviour of dairy cows in late lactation

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Abstract

Heat stress is one of the most important problems that dairy cows have to face and the use of cooling systems is becoming more and more important. The first reaction that has the animal to cope with the environmental variations is to modify its behaviour. This study was aimed to investigate the effect of heat stress and a cooling system on the feeding behaviour of Italian Holstein Friesian dairy cows in late lactation. Two experiments were performed. In the first experiment, eight dairy cows were firstly kept 7 d under thermoneutral condition, and then under mild heat stress (temperature humidity index, THI, ranging between 72 and 78) for others 7 d. The second experiment consisted of 8 dairy cows used in a two-period cross-over design where the treatment was the use or not of a sprinkler system for cooling cows under mild heat stress. Cows were equipped with a noseband pressure sensor able to detect rumination and eating time, number of rumination and eating chews, number of rumination boluses and rumination intensity. Heat stress reduced rumination time, number of rumination chews and boluses (p

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Corazzin, M., Romanzin, A., Foletto, V., Fabro, C., Da Borso, F., Baldini, M., … Piasentier, E. (2021). Heat stress and feeding behaviour of dairy cows in late lactation. Italian Journal of Animal Science, 20(1), 600–610. https://doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2021.1903818

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