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Transactions of the ASABE | 2010

PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES OF DAIRY COWS DURING EXTENDED SOLAR EXPOSURE

Kifle G. Gebremedhin; C. N. Lee; P. E. Hillman; R. J. Collier

Sweating and respiration rates, and skin (dorsal) and core (rectal) temperatures of 12 Holstein dairy cows were measured in controlled environments at the William Parker Agricultural Research Complex, University of Arizona-Tucson. The focus of the study was: (1) to establish the pattern (linear or periodic) of sweating, (2) to establish whether skin or core temperature drives sweating, (3) to determine how cows respond to a prolonged solar exposure, and (4) to compare dairy cows physiological responses to hot and humid versus hot and dry environmental conditions. The 12 cows were divided into two groups of six cows each and were housed alternately between two chambers. The two chambers were identical, but one (experimental chamber) included solar lamps to simulate solar load. The cows were alternately exposed to 550 W/m2 solar load, THI at 79.6, and air velocity in the measurement area (dorsal surface) was maintained at 1.0 m/s. Skin temperature was greater than 35°C (threshold for heat stress). There was considerable variation in sweating rates between cows. Cows sweat in a cyclic manner, and the results suggest that skin temperature is the primary driving force for sweating. The maximum sweating rate of dairy cows was around 660 g/m2-h.


Transactions of the ASABE | 2005

THERMOREGULATORY RESPONSES ASSOCIATED WITH LYING AND STANDING IN HEAT-STRESSED DAIRY COWS

P. E. Hillman; C. N. Lee; S. T. Willard

The purpose of this study is to characterize the thermoregulatory responses of unrestrained heat-stressed dairy cows within a freestall environment using fan and spray configurations for cooling cows while lying or standing. An experimental treatment sprayed individual cows lying in freestalls from 11:00 to 15:00 (stall cooling period) during hot-humid weather (average THI of 82.4) over a five-day trial period, using ultrasound transceivers to detect their presence. Core body temperatures were continuously monitored with vaginal temperature loggers. To assess behavioral responses, cows were visually monitored during the stall cooling period. Respiration rates and dorsal surface temperatures were recorded when the cow lay down or stood up in a stall. Core body temperature of lying cows rises at a rate of 0.6°C h-1 when exposed to fan cooling alone. Adding spray cooling to fan cooling slows the rate of rise to 0.3°C h-1. With or without freestall spray cooling, cows stand and seek cooling when their core body temperatures reach 38.9°C. Core body temperature is a more reliable indicator than either dorsal skin temperatures or respiration rates for predicting when cows stand and seek cooling. Core body temperatures of cows fall at a rate of 0.7°C h-1 while standing under feed line spray and fan cooling, while core body temperatures of cows standing under fans without spray remain unchanged. To cool heat-stressed cows, water spray is required in addition to fans while the cows are standing. Fans alone are inadequate.


Applied Engineering in Agriculture | 2009

Continuous Measurements of Vaginal Temperature of Female Cattle Using A Data Logger Encased in a Plastic Anchor

P. E. Hillman; Kifle G. Gebremedhin; S. T. Willard; C. N. Lee; A. D. Kennedy

Vaginal temperatures of 20 pregnant dairy cows were continuously recorded using data loggers with built in temperature sensors for 3 weeks. Plastic anchors were designed and produced to hold data loggers inside the vagina of cows. The anchors were manufactured from plastisol - a flexible translucent plastic that could be molded to a desired configuration. The material is contact compatible with dairy products but is not known if it qualifies for a long-term implant. The plastic cures by heating to 160°C, which takes about one hour in an oven at a temperature of 215°C. The volume of material necessary to produce one anchor is about 90 cc. The system and procedure was reliable, accurate, low cost, easy to implant and does not fall out, and had no ill effects to the health of the cows or disturb their behavior/activities. Rectal temperatures were recorded using a high performance digital thermometer. The vaginal temperatures were compared to the rectal temperatures and the results matched to within 0.06 ± 0.015°C.


Physiology & Behavior | 1978

Effects of feathers on instrumental thermoregulatory behavior in chickens

Kenneth A. Horowitz; Norman R. Scott; P. E. Hillman; A. van Tienhoven

Abstract Experiments with domestic fowl confirm that normally feathered chickens utilize species-specific behavior and autonomic responses to cold (at least to−5°C) rather than initiate an instrumental response. When the thermally insulative feathers are removed chickens readily utilize the instrumental response and are able to maintain physiological temperatures not significantly different from feathered birds. Simultaneous measurements of the mean radiant temperature of the chamber and body, skin, and hypothalamic temperatures suggested an approximately equal influence of these three temperatures in the determination of chamber mean radiant temperature.


2007 ASABE Annual International Meeting, Technical Papers | 2007

SWEATING RATE OF DAIRY COWS UNDER SHADE AND SUNNY ENVIRONMENTS

Kifle G. Gebremedhin; P. E. Hillman; C. N. Lee; R. J. Collier

Sweating rates from live Holstein cows were measured using a closed chamber VapoMeter, and a portable calorimeter. Measurements were made when cows were in shade and exposed to direct sunlight under different air velocities. The effect of color of hair coat on sweating rate was compared. Comparisons of different sweat rate measuring systems were also compared. The sweating rate at zero air velocity using the VapoMeter was 62 g/h-m , and the sweating rates at 0.2 and 1.0 m/s measured using the portable calorimeter were 238 g/h-m and 333 g/h-m , respectively when ambient temperature was 33°C, relative humidity was 52% and solar load was 740 W/m .


Applied Engineering in Agriculture | 2011

Body Temperature and Behavioral Activities of Four Breeds of Heifers in Shade and Full Sun

Kifle G. Gebremedhin; C. N. Lee; P. E. Hillman; T. M. Brown-Brandl

Four breeds of heifers, eight of each breed, were housed in two types of feedlot pens – one with shade and the other with no shade (exposed to full sun). The breeds were: Black Angus, white Charolais, tan-colored MARC I, and dark-red colored MARC III. The objectives were to determine whether shade made a significant difference in thermal responses (animal activities and vaginal temperature) and to determine the effect of hair-coat color on body temperature due to solar exposure. Providing shade alleviated heat stress by lowering body temperature especially for black Angus and dark-red colored MARC III because of their higher hair-coat color capacity to absorb solar load. These two breeds spent more time standing in shade than the tan-colored MARC I and the white Charolais. The rate of increase of body temperature was higher when the heifers were lying down in full sun (0.61+0.27°C/h) followed by lying down in shade (0.25+0.17°C/h) because of reduced effective surface area to convective evaporative cooling (p<0.05). There was direct linear correlation (R2 ˜ 0.90) between solar absorbing capacity of hair coat and percent of time the heifers spent in shade. The percent of time spent in shade both standing and lying down for each breed was: 89% for Black Angus, 81% for dark-red MARC III, 57% for tan-colored MARC I, and 55% for white Charolais. The study suggested that shade was critical for feedlot cows, especially those with dark hair coat, allowing them to thermally regulate their physiologic needs.


Journal of Thermal Biology | 1989

Energy budget of the chicken foot

P. E. Hillman; Norman R. Scott

Abstract 1. 1.|A mathematical model predicts the energy loss from a chicken foot provided the following variables are known: body temperature, air temperature, wind velocity, blood flow to the foot, and the relative partitioning of blood flow via two distinct venous returns. 2. 2.|Chickens are capable of keeping their feet from freezing at temperatures as low as −30°C ambient, but at a high energy cost. 3. 3.|Chickens can modulate blood flow to their feet at thermoneutral temperatures enough to vary heat loss to environment by about one-fourth metabolic heat production.


Copeia | 1978

The Ecology and Burrowing Behavior of the Chihuahuan Fringe-Footed Lizard, Uma exsul

F. Harvey Pough; David J. Morafka; P. E. Hillman

The Chihuahuan Desert lizards Uma e. exsul and U. e. paraphygas are morphologically and ecologically less specialized for life on loose aeolian sand than are the other species of the genus. They do not occur in large areas of vegetationless sand, and are probably limited to areas in which rodents can maintain open burrows year-round. Uma exsul use these burrows to escape from predators and for nocturnal retreat. Only in an area with very dense, low-growing vegetation did we see them bury in loose sand at night. Unlike other species in the genus, U. exsul occurs on dunes in which a large amount of silt is mixed with the sand, and it also lives on hardened silt substrates side by side with Holbrookia maculata. Body temperatures of active U. exsul averaged 38.7 C (S.E. = 0.4, n = 45), the same as other species in the genus, but U. exsul begin activity later in the morning than do the specialized forms. In this respect the behavior of U. exsul is like Callisaurus. Like the other species in the genus, U. exsul shows no physiological adaptations for sand-swimming; heart rates of buried lizards are lower than those of lizards on the surface, but the difference reflects inactivity, not a submergence bradycardia.


Central theme, technology for all: sharing the knowledge for development. Proceedings of the International Conference of Agricultural Engineering, XXXVII Brazilian Congress of Agricultural Engineering, International Livestock Environment Symposium - ILES VIII, Iguassu Falls City, Brazil, 31st August to 4th September, 2008. | 2008

Sweating rates of dairy and feedlot cows under stressful thermal environments.

Kifle G. Gebremedhin; P. E. Hillman; C. N. Lee; R. J. Collier; S. T. Willard; J. D. Arthington; T. M. Brown-Brandl

Sweating rates from heat-stressed dairy and feedlot cows were measured using a Portable Calorimeter and a Bovine Evaporation Meter. Measurements were taken when cows were in their natural habitat. The focus of the study was to compare sweating rates measured from different breeds of dairy and feedlot cows, and determine the level of influence of environmental factors (air temperature, relative humidity, solar load , air velocity), and hair-coat color on sweating rate. The cows were exposed to solar radiation greater than 500 W/m2 (average 833 ± 132 W/m2), average THI was 82.7 ± 1.64 for all studies except for the Nebraska data where the THI was 77.4 ± 4. Air velocity in the sample area was between 0.8 and 1.2 m/s, and body (rectal) temperature was greater than 38.8°C (threshold for heat stress). The range of sweating rates was between 189 ± 84.6 and 522 ± 127.7 g/m2-h, and that of body temperature was between 39.3 ± 0.53 and 41.7 ± 0.19 °C. Breed difference, hair-coat color. Solar load, and air velocity are critical (statistically significant at P-values <0.05) on sweating rates.


2010 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, June 20 - June 23, 2010 | 2010

Physiological Responses of Dairy Cows during Extended Solar Exposure

Kifle G. Gebremedhin; C. N. Lee; P. E. Hillman; R. J. Collier

Sweating and respiration rates, and skin (dorsal) and core (rectal) temperatures of 12 Holstein dairy cows were measured in controlled environments at the William Parker Agricultural Research Complex, University of Arizona-Tucson. The focus of the study was: (1) to establish the pattern (linear or periodic) of sweating, (2) to establish whether skin or core temperature drives sweating, (3) to determine how cows react to a prolonged solar exposure, and (4) to compare dairy cows physiological responses to hot and humid versus hot and dry environmental conditions. The cows were divided into two groups of 6 cows each and were housed alternately between two chambers. The two chambers were identical but one (experimental chamber) included solar lamps to simulate solar load. The cows were alternately exposed to 550 W/m2 solar load, THI was initially set at 83 and later at 79.6, and air velocity in the measurement area on the dorsal surface was between 0.8 and 1.2 m/s. Skin temperature was greater than 35°C (threshold for heat stress). There was considerable variation in sweating rates between cows of the Holstein breed. Cows sweat in a cyclic manner and the results suggest that skin temperature is the primary driving force for sweating. The maximum sweating rate of dairy cows and feedlot heifers is around 660 g/m2-h. A prolonged exposure to hot and dry environmental condition made entirely black or predominantly black cows to foam in the mouth, stick their tongues out, and drool, and immediate intervention with water spraying helped to alleviate the thermal stress.

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C. N. Lee

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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S. T. Willard

Mississippi State University

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T. M. Brown-Brandl

United States Department of Agriculture

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A. L. Johnson

Pennsylvania State University

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A.M. Parkhurst

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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