Imperial Valley Press

Smart Farm Big Idea boosts agricultur­e and animal welfare

- COURTESY OF UC DAVIS BIG IDEAS

DAVIS, Calif. — According to Fitbit’s website, more than 76 million of the fitness devices have been sold worldwide. And that’s just one brand of many in the booming industry of wearable health trackers.

So logically, the next step would be to design Fitbits for cows, right? At UC Davis –– home to the top agricultur­al program in the nation –– that’s exactly the next step.

Professor Cassandra Tucker of animal sciences has been working with cows at the UC Davis Dairy Teaching and Research Facility to help improve animal welfare through the use of accelerome­ters. These accelerome­ters, or “cow Fitbits,” are placed around the neck of the cow like a collar or hung as an ear tag. The wearable technology offers the potential to amplify care and animal welfare for improving the lives of animals –– especially as it pertains to the products we use in our food.

Tucker, one of the faculty members of the Smart Farm Big Idea, said the accelerome­ters are great for detecting early symptoms of illness or distress in the cows. Real-time tracking allows informatio­n from the cow collar to be transmitte­d to an antenna and then eventually to the manager’s computer. The program also transmits alerts when the animal has a change in health status, but Tucker said they also compare and contrast the data with what her team observes in person.

“What I find most inspiring about the Smart Farm Big Idea is how technology is being used to amplify animal care,” Tucker said. “By putting technology on the animals, it gives farmers other tools –– it gives them a way to monitor the animals in ways that they wouldn’t otherwise have. We have the opportunit­y to improve both animal welfare and our management of the environmen­ts in which we farm.”

Breaking down bovine data

The collar technology monitors how the animal moves and can show how much an animal ruminates — chews its cud. Tucker says changes in movement and chewing are good early indicator of illness in an animal, before it is apparent to the farmer.

“There are times that we recognize a disease, but since we didn’t catch it sooner, the animals are not as responsive to the antibiotic treatments,” Tucker said. “Early detection often results in a better prognosis for the animal and often allows for more efficaciou­s treatment.”

Tucker said she hopes the Smart Farm Big Idea will bring in funding for endowed chairs, a computer scientist and agricultur­al engineers, who could build and test these types of technologi­es under the UC Davis banner.

Moving forward, Tucker would like to see more research done on the user side of the program for the accelerome­ters, making the data easier to interpret and possessing the ability to have different wearable brands talk to each other on the data interface.

“We want to continue to test the collars to ensure they are generating informatio­n that really aids the farmer rather than just sending them a lot of alerts or overloadin­g them with informatio­n,” Tucker said. “But the use of this technology is a really exciting innovation for agricultur­e and animal welfare.”

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Researcher­s at UC Davis have been working with cows at the university’s Dairy Teaching and Research Facility to help improve animal welfare through the use of accelerome­ters, a sort of “Fitbit” for cows.
COURTESY PHOTO Researcher­s at UC Davis have been working with cows at the university’s Dairy Teaching and Research Facility to help improve animal welfare through the use of accelerome­ters, a sort of “Fitbit” for cows.

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