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Growing up with a Friend May Improve a Dairy Cow’s Lifelong Welfare

The more adaptable cows are, the less they will be stressed and fearful in new situations and the more milk they should produce, scientist says

by University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences
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dairy cowsEmily Miller-Cushon, a UF/IFAS assistant professor of animal sciences, will utilize a new, $490,000 grant from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, an arm of the USDA, to fund research into early dairy cattle development. She will conduct research at the UF Dairy Unit in Hague, north of Gainesville, Florida.Credit: UF/IFAS

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — If young dairy calves live together, they develop better social skills and may eventually produce more milk as a cow, a University of Florida scientist says.

Just like humans, dairy cows need to adapt to changing environments as they develop. That includes moving among social groups, changing housing arrangements, and entering the milking parlor, said Emily Miller-Cushon, an assistant professor of animal sciences at the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

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A cow’s ability to cope with these events depends on her ability to learn and interact socially with other cows, said Miller-Cushon. The more adaptable they are, the less they will be stressed and fearful in new situations and the more milk they should produce, the UF/IFAS scientist said. This means that their welfare—which broadly refers to the animal’s health and performance, emotional state, and opportunity for normal behaviors like socialization—will improve.

“The most common way to raise dairy calves from birth is in individual pens, but providing early social contact may improve the long-term welfare of these animals. This should benefit sustainability of the dairy industry as a whole, improving consumer perceptions and having economic benefits for producers,” Miller-Cushon said.

The cattle industry is big in Florida. In 2017, Florida’s combined beef and dairy cattle and allied industries generated revenues totaling $16.8 billion and supported 118,191 full- and part-time jobs, according to a recent UF/IFAS economic report.

Miller-Cushon will utilize a new, $490,000 grant from the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, an arm of the USDA, to fund research into early dairy cattle development. She plans to start her research later this year at the UF Dairy Unit in Hague, north of Gainesville, Florida. Similar types of data also will come from scientists at the University of Tennessee.

Dairy farmers commonly house calves individually because it simplifies management and may protect calves from disease, Miller-Cushon said. Yet evidence suggests that social contact during this period may benefit calf behavioral development without greatly increasing disease risk. Furthermore, no work has determined the broad effects that early calf social contact may have on animal welfare over a longer time, she said.

Previous research in young calves and across other species suggests that early social contact has critical effects on learning and development of social behavior, Miller-Cushon said.

“Cattle are social species, so early social interaction may be important for lifelong normal social behaviors,” she said.