Effect of artificial insemination, ruminal incubation, and esophageal tubing on cortisol concentration in blood of lactating dairy cows
Victoria Ferreira, Gonzalo Ferreira

TL;DR
This study found that common farm procedures like artificial insemination, ruminal incubation, and esophageal tubing did not significantly increase stress hormone levels in dairy cows, though restraint during these procedures might have a bigger impact.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence that routine human interventions on dairy farms do not elevate cortisol concentrations in cows, challenging assumptions about stress from these procedures.
Findings
Cortisol concentrations in plasma after interventions did not differ from concentrations before the interventions.
Cows subjected to artificial insemination had greater cortisol concentrations than those subjected to other treatments.
Animal restraint, rather than the interventions themselves, seems to affect cortisol concentrations more.
Abstract
Summary: We determined the concentration of cortisol in plasma before (T1) and after (T2) animals were subjected to no intervention (NEG), artificial insemination (INS), ruminal incubation (RUM), or esophageal tubing (TUB). Blood samples from 40 lactating Holstein cows were collected from the coccygeal vessels to measure cortisol concentration. Cortisol concentrations in plasma after the interventions did not differ from those before the interventions. Cows subjected to artificial insemination had greater cortisol concentrations than cows subjected to the other treatments. No interaction existed between treatment and time. Some cows subjected to insemination in a palpation rail had elevated cortisol concentrations before the intervention. Therefore, animal restraint seems to affect cortisol concentrations in plasma more than actual human intervention. In conclusion, human interventions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEffects of Environmental Stressors on Livestock · Reproductive Physiology in Livestock · Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies
