Hey! Content is protected. You can share this page via the share button 😊
Course Content
Master Animal Ethics and Welfare – Notes, Case Studies and Practical Insights – with Rahul

Common welfare problems in dairy cows (Webster, 2010)

Area

Criteria not being met

1. Good housing

Animals shouldn’t suffer from prolonged hunger

2. Good housing

Animals should have comfort round resting

Animals should have enough space to move round freely

3. Good health

Injuries ( Slippery floors)

Disease 1: Painful diseases such as mastitis, foot disorders

Disease 2: metabolic diseases

Pain caused by procedures ( tail-docking)

4. Appropriate behavior

Negative emotional states eg: loss of calf, frustration, tiredness

Unable to express social behaviours, as appropriate to the species

Unable to express other species-typical behaviours; no grazing, crowding/ bullying

Poor human-animal relationships, rough handling

 

Area 1: Good Feeding

a. Genetic selection for high production- inherent welfare problem

  • Holstein ( approx. 18000 liters per lactation: 50 L/day)
  • On grass >> can only produce 25 liters of milk per day
  • Need extra energy-dense feed
  • Kept inside to ensure they eat enough

 

b. Recombinant bovine somatotropin (rBST) (Dohoo et al., 2003)

  • Injection every 14 days >> increase milk production by 10-15 %
  • Increase DM intake by approx. 1.5 kg/ day
  • Reduced BCS
  • Reduced fertility: increased risk of mastitis and lameness: injection site reactions

 

c. Oxytocin

  • Increases milk letdown

 

Area 2: Good Housing

a. Insufficient number of cubicles

  • Prolonged standing (especially heifers)

 

b. Poor cubicle design. Eg

  • To short or narrow
  • Insufficient lunging space as cows rise

 

c. Litter or no bedding: Thin cows

d. Dirty bedding/ concrete: Mastitis

 

Area 3: Good Health (Gregory, 2011)

a. Silage feeding >> wet, acid slurry: Slipping if concrete is smooth

b. High-protein feeds >> high concentrations of urea in urine: Keratolytic >> claw erosion

c. Dirty flooring predisposes to Foot infections and Mastitis

d. Foot disorders- infections

  • Sole ulcer, digital dermatitis
  • Multiple causes, eg. Genetics, husbandry, Pain
  • Reduced milk yield and fertility

 

e. Lack of recognition by farmers (Leach et al., 2010)

  • Prevalence approx. 36%, but famers did not perceive the welfare or financial costs of it
  • ‘Bad’ becomes normal- farmers overworked and have no point of comparison

 

f. Bacterial infection

  • Predisposing factors, e.g. genetics, cortisol at parturition, udder hygiene, rBST

 

g. Tail-docking (von Keyserlingk et al., 2009)

  • Painful
  • Does not improve udder hygiene or health

 

h. Robotic milking

  • Increase risk of mastitis, e.g. inadequate hygiene (Hovinen & pyorala, 2011)

 

Area 4: Appropriate Behavior

a. Negative Emotions

  • Pain- lameness
  • Exhaustion- a state of extreme physical or mental tiredness
  • Underlying metabolic cause: genetics or cheap food
  • Fear- bullying, rough handling. Eg fear of handler reduces residual milk letdown
  • Distress at separation from calf
Home Courses + Research Blog
Scroll to Top