Journal article
Lame cows on Australian dairy farms: A comparison of farmer-identified lameness and formal lameness scoring, and the position of lame cows within the milking order
DS Beggs, EC Jongman, PE Hemsworth, AD Fisher
Journal of Dairy Science | ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC | Published : 2019
Abstract
On Australian pasture-based farms, where cows may often walk several kilometers and stand for several hours per day in a crowded concrete yard while they wait to be milked, the potential for lameness to negatively affect animal welfare is of ongoing concern. Several studies have shown that farmers tend to underestimate the incidence of lameness. Further, improving farmer diagnosis/identification of lameness is likely to result in more prompt treatment, which in turn will improve clinical and animal welfare outcomes. We scored 19,154 cows over 50 farms for lameness, in herd groups ranging from approximately 100 to 1,000 cows, as they left the milking parlor. We compared these results with far..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to the staff of the Warrnambool Veterinary Clinic (Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia) and the farmers who graciously allowed us on their farms. We acknowledge the Victorian Department of Economic Development Jobs Transport (Melbourne, Victoria, Australia) and Resources and Dairy Australia Ltd. (Southbank, Victoria, Australia) for their support of this project. This project was also supported through an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship.