Monitoring grazing behaviour of cattle with access to a Greenfeed methane monitoring system (GEM)
1. To determine if access to a GEM unit influences grazing behaviours with these being: a. grazing habits b. grazing distribution c. animal social groups in a paddock situation d. paddock utilisation Grazing behaviours will be identified by measuring livestock residency index, walking distance, walking speed etc thus allowing grazing behaviour to be characterised and habit identified. This is in addition to partitioning the paddock to identify if certain behaviours and patterns of grazing were due to GEM unit presence. 2. To determine if there is a relationship between methane emission and the above mentioned grazing behaviours, the following will be conducted: a. Association study whereby livestock residency index is correlated with methane production measurements to identify if an even grazing distribution and pattern has a different level of methane production than an uneven biased grazing distribution, where a single point in a paddock may be excessively grazed b. Measurement of any differences in methane production associated with walking distance, walking time and rumination time
45 animals from 2014-03-05 to 2014-04-03Project Summary
- Species
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Bos Indicus
True Cattle - Brahman - Location
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'Fletcherview' station, Charters Towers QLD
- Date Range
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2014-03-05 to 2014-04-03
- Animals
- Spatial Reference System
Open Access
The data in this project is publicly available under a Creative Commons Attribution License. If you use these data in any type of publication then you must cite the project DOI (if available) or any published peer-reviewed papers associated with the study. We strongly encourage you to contact the data custodians to discuss data usage and appropriate accreditation.
- Contact
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- Joe Miller
- joseph.miller@une.edu.au