Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
J Dairy Sci. 2018 Aug;101(8):7287-7296. doi: 10.3168/jds.2018-14545. Epub 2018 May 10.
Weaned dairy calves are commonly exposed to changing physical and social environments, and ability to adapt to novel management is likely to have performance and welfare implications. We characterized how behavioral responses of weaned heifer calves develop over time after introduction to a social group. Previously individually reared Holstein heifer calves (n = 15; 60 ± 5 d of age; mean ± standard deviation) were introduced in weekly cohorts (5 ± 3 new calves/wk) to an existing group on pasture (8 ± 2 calves/group). We measured activity and behavior on the day of initial introduction and after 1 wk, when calves were exposed to regrouping (addition of younger calves and removal of older calves from the pen). Upon introduction, calves had 2 to 3 times more visits to each region of the pasture; they also spent more time at the back of the pasture, closest to where they were introduced and furthest from the feeding area (25.13 vs. 9.63% of observation period, standard error = 5.04), compared with behavior after 1 wk. Calves also spent less time feeding (5.0 vs. 9.6% of observation period, standard error = 0.82) and self-grooming (0.52 vs. 1.31% of observation period; standard error = 0.20) and more time within 1 to 3 body lengths of another calf (16.3 vs. 11.9% of observation period, standard error = 2.3) when initially grouped. We also explored whether behavioral responses to initial postweaning grouping might be associated with individual differences in behavioral flexibility. To evaluate this, we assessed cognition of individually housed calves (n = 18) at 5 wk of age using a spatial discrimination task conducted in a T-maze to measure initial learning (ability to learn the location of a milk reward) and reversal learning (ability to relearn location of the milk reward when it was switched to opposite arm of the maze). Calves were categorized by reversal learning success (passed, n = 6, or failed, n = 8). Calves that passed the reversal learning stage of the cognitive task spent less time at the back of the pen (9.3 vs. 27.4% of observation period, standard error = 5.5) and tended to have lower latency to feed (121.8 vs. 306.2 min; standard error = 96.4) on the day of introduction compared with calves that failed reversal learning. Overall, we found that initial introduction to social grouping had a marked influence on behavior of weaned calves that decreased over time. Further, these results suggest that individual variability in cognitive ability may be predictive of behavioral responses and ability to adapt to a novel environment.
断奶后的奶牛犊通常会接触到不断变化的物理和社会环境,它们适应新管理方式的能力可能会对其性能和福利产生影响。本研究旨在描述奶牛犊在被引入一个社会群体后,其行为反应是如何随时间发展的。先前单独饲养的荷斯坦奶牛犊(n = 15;60 ± 5 d 龄;均值 ± 标准差)每周以 5 ± 3 头的速度(每周 ± 3 头新牛)被引入到一个现有的牧场群体中(每组 8 ± 2 头奶牛)。在最初的介绍日和重新分组(将较年轻的牛犊添加到围栏中,并将较年长的牛犊从围栏中取出)后的 1 周,我们对奶牛犊的活动和行为进行了测量。在最初的介绍中,奶牛犊每区的访问次数增加了 2 到 3 倍;它们在牧场的后面停留的时间也更多,最接近引入它们的地方,也最远离开喂食区(25.13%与 9.63%的观察期,标准误差= 5.04),而 1 周后的行为则不同。与 1 周后的行为相比,奶牛犊的进食时间(5.0%与 9.6%的观察期,标准误差= 0.82)和自我梳理时间(0.52%与 1.31%的观察期;标准误差= 0.20)更少,而与另一头牛犊的距离在 1 到 3 个体长内的时间更多(16.3%与 11.9%的观察期,标准误差= 2.3)。我们还探讨了最初断奶后分组对行为的反应是否可能与行为灵活性的个体差异有关。为了评估这一点,我们在 5 周龄时使用 T 形迷宫进行空间辨别任务来评估单独饲养的奶牛犊(n = 18)的认知能力,以衡量其初始学习(获得牛奶奖励位置的能力)和反转学习(当牛奶奖励转移到迷宫的相反臂时,重新学习其位置的能力)。根据反转学习的成功情况对奶牛犊进行分类(通过,n = 6,或失败,n = 8)。与反转学习失败的奶牛犊相比,通过反转学习阶段的认知任务的奶牛犊在畜栏后面的时间更少(9.3%与 27.4%的观察期,标准误差= 5.5),并且在介绍日的进食潜伏期也更短(121.8 与 306.2 min;标准误差= 96.4)。总的来说,我们发现,最初引入社会群体对断奶奶牛犊的行为有显著影响,这种影响随时间的推移而减弱。此外,这些结果表明,认知能力的个体差异可能是行为反应和适应新环境能力的预测因素。