Responsiveness of beef cattle (Bos taurus) to human approach, novelty, social isolation, restraint and trade-offs between feeding and social companionship

This study investigated responsiveness of beef cattle to various environmental stimuli by subjecting 15–16 Japanese Black cows to five tests repeated twice. Within individual behavioral measures, cows were moderately (repeatability = 0.54–0.70) or highly (repeatability = 0.74–0.89) consistent in fli...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animal science journal Vol. 87; no. 11; pp. 1443 - 1452
Main Authors: Hirata, Masahiko, Kubo, Shotaro, Taketomi, Ikuko, Matsumoto, Yuka
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Australia Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-11-2016
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Summary:This study investigated responsiveness of beef cattle to various environmental stimuli by subjecting 15–16 Japanese Black cows to five tests repeated twice. Within individual behavioral measures, cows were moderately (repeatability = 0.54–0.70) or highly (repeatability = 0.74–0.89) consistent in flight distance during grazing and resting in the human approach tests, maximum distance from the group pen and the number of total and different feed tub visits in the feeding–sociability trade‐off test, and unwillingness to enter the restraint, movement under restraint and flight speed after release from restraint in the social isolation and restraint test. By contrast, cows were not consistent in the latency to make the first contact and the number of contacts with novel object(s) in the novelty test (repeatability = 0.24–0.39). Across behavioral measures in different tests, cows showed no consistency (P ≥ 0.05) in any combinations of measures from the two human approach tests, the trade‐off test and the social isolation and restraint test. In conclusion, human approach (particularly during resting), feeding–sociability trade‐off and social isolation and restraint situations can be used for evaluating personality in Japanese Black cows, while the value of the novelty test needs to be reexamined.
Bibliography:ArticleID:ASJ12598
ark:/67375/WNG-58V5TQC5-H
istex:4A19F5D4FB585DACD96EF6F1C711DC98F0E1FCB8
University of Miyazaki - No. 9941090215
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS KAKENHI - No. 23580371
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:1344-3941
1740-0929
DOI:10.1111/asj.12598