Effect of ambient temperature on the surface temperature of black and white areas of the coat in a herd of Holstein cows in the department of Antioquia, Colombia

Abstract

The article evaluates the effect of ambient temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation, and wind speed according to the THSW index on the surface temperature of the white and black areas of the coat of Holstein cows. The study used information of five Holstein dairy cows from the El Recreo farm, located in the municipality of Abejorral, Colombia. Surface temperature was measured with an infrared thermometer every 2 h during 15 days in 10 different sites: anterior, middle, and posterior dorsal line, right and left flank, chest, right and left neck, vulva, and mammary gland. To evaluate the effect of ambient temperature on body temperature, an index that involves temperature, humidity, solar radiation, and wind speed (THSW) was used, and for statistical analysis, a mixed generalized additive model. THSW was 10 and 27 °C. The sampled areas had a difference in temperature being the black spots that had higher surface temperature. Temperature oscillated between 32.5 and 35.8 °C for white areas, and between 34.5 and 40.5 °C for black areas. Higher surface temperature values for both zones at all points had higher THSW values. It is concluded that the THSW index has a differentiated effect on body surface temperature according to the color of the coat, the black spots having higher temperatures.
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Keywords

dairy cattle
relative humidity
temperature
coat