Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T12:23:34.515Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Relationship between locomotor play of dairy calves and their weight gains and energy intakes around weaning

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2015

G. G. Miguel-Pacheco*
Affiliation:
Applied Animal Behaviour and Animal Welfare Programme, The University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush Veterinary Centre, Roslin EH25 9RG, UK
A. Vaughan
Affiliation:
Applied Animal Behaviour and Animal Welfare Programme, The University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush Veterinary Centre, Roslin EH25 9RG, UK University of British Columbia, PO Box 1000, 6947 Highway 7, Agassiz, BC, Canada V0M 1A0
A. M. de Passillé
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, PO Box 1000, 6947 Highway 7, Agassiz, BC, Canada V0M 1A0
J. Rushen
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, PO Box 1000, 6947 Highway 7, Agassiz, BC, Canada V0M 1A0
*
Get access

Abstract

Play behaviour has been proposed as a measure of good welfare in growing animals and locomotor play by calves is often reduced after weaning off milk. Adjusting weaning age according to individual calves’ abilities to eat solid feed maintains energy intake and weight gain during weaning. We investigated the effects of this method of weaning on locomotor play of calves and the relationship between locomotor play and energy intake and weight gains. We measured the running behaviour of 56 Holstein heifer calves before and after weaning. Calves were housed in groups of eight, fed milk, grain starter and hay from automated feeders. Weaning began when their voluntary intake of grain starter reached either 200 or 400 g/day, and weaning was completed when starter intake reached either 800 or 1600 g/day. Before weaning, older calves ran less than young ones; and the duration of running correlated with weight gains and digestible energy intake. Immediately after weaning, digestible energy intake and locomotor play decreased but no correlation was observed between these variables. One week after weaning, the duration of running was correlated with both energy intake and weight gain. Digestible energy intake increased but locomotor play continued to decrease. The amount of running a calf does after weaning partly reflects energy intake and weight gain, supporting suggestions that locomotor play is good indicator of welfare and fitness of growing animals. However, the decline in locomotor play following weaning is not solely due to decreased energy intake.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Animal Consortium 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Boissy, A, Manteuffel, G, Jensen, MB, Moe, RO, Spruijt, B, Keeling, LJ, Winckler, C, Frokman, B, Dimitrov, I, Langbein, J, Bakken, M, Veissier, I and Aubert, A 2007. Assessment of positive emotions in animals to improve their welfare. Physiology and Behaviour 92, 375397.Google Scholar
Budzynska, M and Weary, DM 2008. Weaning distress in dairy calves: effects of alternative weaning procedures. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 112, 3339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burghardt, GM 2005. The genesis of play: testing the limits. MIT Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Caro, TM 1995. Short-term costs and correlates of play in cheetahs. Animal Behaviour 49, 333345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Passillé, AM and Rushen, J 2012. Adjusting the weaning age of calves fed by automated feeders according to individual intakes of solid feed. Journal of Dairy Science 95, 52925298.Google Scholar
de Passillé, AM, Sweeney, B and Rushen, J 2010. Cross-sucking and gradual weaning of dairy calves. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 124, 1115.Google Scholar
Duve, LR and Jensen, MB 2011. The level of social contact affects social behaviour in pre-weaned dairy calves. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 135, 3443.Google Scholar
Gomendio, M 1988. The development of different types of play in gazelles: implications for the nature and functions of play. Animal Behaviour 36, 825836.Google Scholar
Held, SDE and Špinka, M 2011. Animal play and animal welfare. Animal Behaviour 81, 891899.Google Scholar
Jensen, MB and Kyhn, R 2000. Play behaviour in group-housed dairy calves, the effect of space allowance. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 67, 3546.Google Scholar
Jensen, MB, Vestergaard, KS and Krohn, CC 1998. Play behaviour in dairy calves kept in pens: the effect of social contact and space allowance. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 56, 97108.Google Scholar
Krachun, C, Rushen, J and de Passille, AM 2010. Play behaviour in dairy calves is reduced by weaning and by a low energy intake. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 122, 7176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, P and Bateson, P 2010. Measuring behaviour: an introductory guide. University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom.Google Scholar
Mintline, EM, Wood, SL, de Passillé, AM, Rushen, J and Tucker, CB 2012. Assessing calf play behavior in an arena test. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 141, 101107.Google Scholar
Mintline, EM, Stewart, M, Rogers, AR, Cox, NR, Verkerk, GA, Stookey, JM, Webster, JR and Tucker, CB 2013. Play behavior as an indicator of animal welfare: disbudding in dairy calves. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 144, 2230.Google Scholar
Müller-Schwarze, D, Stagge, B and Müller-Schwarze, C 1982. Play behaviour: persistance, decrease, and energetic compensation during food shortage in deer fawns. Science 215, 8587.Google Scholar
Nicol, CJ, Badnell-Waters, AJ, Nice, R, Kelland, A, Wilson, AD and Harris, PA 2005. The effects of diet and weaning method on the behaviour of young horses. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 95, 205221.Google Scholar
NRC 2001. Nutrient requirements of dairy cattle. National Academy Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Petrie, A and Watson, P 2006. Statistics for veterinary and animal science. Wiley-Blackwell, Cornwall, UK.Google Scholar
Pollard, JC and Littlejohn, RP 2000. Effects of management at weaning on behaviour and weight gain of farmed red deer calves. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 67, 151157.Google Scholar
Reinhardt, V 1980. Social behaviour of Bos indicus . Rural Science 4, 153156.Google Scholar
Roth, BA, Keil, NM, Gygax, l and Hillmann, E 2009. Influence of weaning method on health status and rumen development in dairy calves. Journal of Dairy Science 92, 645656.Google Scholar
Rushen, J and de Passillé, AM 2012. Automated measurement of acceleration can detect effects of age, dehorning and weaning on locomotor play of calves. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 139, 169174.Google Scholar
Stanton, A 2012. An evaluation of the impact of management practice on the health and welfare of dairy heifer calves. PhD thesis, University of Guelph.Google Scholar
Sweeney, BC, Rushen, J, Weary, DM and de Passille, AM 2010. Duration of weaning, starter intake, and weight gain of dairy calves fed large amounts of milk. Journal of Dairy Science 93, 148152.Google Scholar
Vitale, AF, Tenucci, M, Papini, M and Lovari, S 1986. Social behaviour of the calves of semi-wild Maremma cattle, Bos primigenius taurus . Applied Animal Behaviour Science 16, 217231.Google Scholar
Weary, DM, Jasper, J and Hotzel, MJ 2008. Understanding weaning distress. Applied Animal Behaviour Science 110, 2441.Google Scholar
Yeates, JW and Main, DCJ 2008. Assessment of positive welfare: a review. The Veterinary Journal 175, 293300.Google Scholar