The objective of this study was to compare weekly mean lying time (LT), neck activity (NA), reticulorumen temperature (RT), and rumination time (RU) among 3 breed groups, milk yield (MY), and temperature-humidity index (THI). Cows (n = 36; 12 Holstein, 12 crossbred, and 12 Jersey) were blocked by parity group (primiparous or multiparous), days in milk, and MY. Lying time, NA, RT, RU, and MY were recorded and averaged by day and then by week for each cow. For study inclusion, each cow was required to have 10 wk of LT, NA, RT, and RU data. Maximum THI were recorded and averaged daily. Mean (±SE) days in milk, LT, MY, RT, RU, NA, and maximum THI were 159.0 ± 6.0 d, 11.1 ± 0.1 h/d, 28.7 ± 0.5 kg/d, 38.8 ± 0.0°C, 6.4 ± 0.1 h/d, 323.8 ± 3.8 activity units, and 56.5 ± 0.6, respectively. The MIXED Procedure of SAS (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC) was used to evaluate fixed effects of breed, MY, parity, THI, and their interactions on LT, NA, RT, and RU with cow nested within breed as subject. All main effects remained in each model regardless of significance level. Stepwise backward elimination was used to remove nonsignificant interactions. The interactions of breed × parity group and maximum THI × parity group were associated with RT. Increasing THI coincided with increasing RT. Least squares means LT for multiparous cows was significantly greater than LT for primiparous cows (11.4 ± 0.3 and 10.5 ± 0.5 h/d, respectively). Least squares means NA for primiparous cows was greater than for multiparous cows of all breeds (372.1 ± 10.9 and 303.4 ± 7.8, respectively). The CORR Procedure of SAS was used to evaluate relationships among RT, RU, LT, NA, and MY. Rumination time was positively correlated with MY (r = 0.30) and negatively correlated with LT (r = −0.14). Reticulorumen temperature was negatively correlated with MY (r = −0.11). Rumination time was positively correlated with NA (r = 0.18) and negatively correlated with LT (r = −0.14). Lying time and NA were negatively correlated (r = −0.43). Neck activity was positively correlated with MY (r = 0.14). Lying time was negatively correlated with MY (r = −0.25). Milk yield was associated with RU, which may be related to cows with greater MY also having a greater feed intake. Lying time increased and NA decreased with increasing parity, which may be effects of social hierarchy, where primiparous cows are more susceptible to being pushed away from the feed bunk and freestalls. Milk yield was positively associated with RU. Greater milk production requires greater feed intake, which may result in longer RU than for low-yielding cows. Lying time decreased as milk yield increased. The behavioral and physiological differences observed in this study provide new insight into the effects that breed, parity, MY, and THI have on cows.
CITATION STYLE
Stone, A. E., Jones, B. W., Becker, C. A., & Bewley, J. M. (2017). Influence of breed, milk yield, and temperature-humidity index on dairy cow lying time, neck activity, reticulorumen temperature, and rumination behavior. Journal of Dairy Science, 100(3), 2395–2403. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2016-11607
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