1. Thermal comfort and productive responses from 7/8 dutch-gir cows submitted to the cooling system.
- Author
-
Silva, M. V., Almeida, G. L. P., Pandorfi, H., Moraes, A. S., Almeida Macêdo, G. A. P., Batista, P. H. D., Silva, R. A. B., and Oliveira, M. E. G.
- Subjects
- *
THERMAL comfort , *COOLING systems , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *EVAPORATIVE cooling , *COWS , *DAIRY cattle , *COLD-blooded animals - Abstract
Climatic conditions that are thermally inappropriate for dairy cattle are associated with a reduction in feed consumption, production, and the composition of the final product. The objective of this research was to identify the influence of the evaporative adiabatic cooling system (EACS) on the thermal comfort and productive responses of dairy cattle, through multivariate analysis by principal components, in the summer and winter seasons of the semiarid region of Pernambuco, Brazil. The data came from an experiment that included 16 multiparous lactating cows, randomly distributed in 4 sets, with 4 experimental phases and 4 treatments (0, 10, 20, and 30 min of exposure to EACS). Multivariate analysis was used utilizing principal components for the thermal comfort indexes, physiological variables, milk production, and composition. The highest milk production in the summer season was for animals exposed to the cooling system for 30 min. In the winter season in the morning shift, the use of the evaporative cooling system for 10 min was sufficient for improvements in milk production. The times of exposure to EACS caused changes in the composition of milk, both in summer and in winter. Thermal stress was characterized by a high temperature and humidity index in all treatments in the afternoon shift. The principal component analysis allowed us to identify the positive influence of evaporative cooling on thermal comfort, physiological responses, production, and composition milk of lactating cows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF