• Physiology & behavior · Jun 2005

    Comparative Study

    Heart rate variability in dairy cows-influences of breed and milking system.

    • K Hagen, J Langbein, C Schmied, D Lexer, and S Waiblinger.
    • University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Department of Veterinary Public Health and Food Science, Institute of Animal Husbandry and Animal Welfare, Veterinärplatz 1, A-1210 Vienna, Austria. Kristin.Hagen@vu-wien.ac.at
    • Physiol. Behav. 2005 Jun 2; 85 (2): 195-204.

    AbstractHeart rate variability parameters in the time, frequency and nonlinear domains were investigated in two breeds of dairy cows (Austrian Simmental and Brown Swiss) milked either in an automatic milking system with partially forced cow traffic or in a herringbone milking parlour. Recordings were made of 24 cows (six of each breed and milking system) during lying, standing idle, and standing being milked, and analysed with linear mixed effects models taking the covariates time of day, live body weight, milk yield, stage of lactation and stage of pregnancy into account. Heart rate and nonlinear deterministic shares were higher, and heart rate variability in the time and frequency domains was lower, later in the day, in cows with higher body weight and in Simmental compared to Brown Swiss cows. Differences in the linear and nonlinear domains during lying indicated an increased level of chronic stress in cows in the automatic milking system with partially forced cow traffic, compared to cows milked in the herringbone milking parlour. No effects of milking system were found during milking, indicating that the stressor in the automatic milking system was not the milking process itself.

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