Te Awamutu Courier

Urine sensors may help reduce N loss

Thanks to AgResearch, farmers could soon have a new tool to address a wee issue with a big impact.

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It’s a wee issue but with a big environmen­tal impact; and a new award-winning technology developed by AgResearch may help farmers to address it. Scientists at the research institute have developed what they’re calling acoustic urine sensors to tackle the problem of nitrogen loss from the urine of cattle, which affects water quality and leads to nitrous oxide emissions — a potent greenhouse gas.

The device attaches to the rear leg of dairy cattle to enable the recording and identifica­tion of distinct sound patterns in “urination events”, including timing and volume.

Data from the recordings is analysed using technologi­es that include machine learning.

Dairy cows typically urinate 10-12 times a day with an average urination volume of two litres per event and an average equivalent urinary nitrogen applicatio­n rate estimated to be about 600kg nitrogen per hectare.

“Our research has shown that the nitrogen load of an individual urination event is closely connected with daily urination frequency, the time of day and the volume of the urination event,” AgResearch senior scientist Brendon Welten said.

This meant that urination frequency and volume per event directly affected the amount of nitrogen deposited in urine patches on the pasture, he said.

“Therefore, cows that urinate more frequently per day, coupled with a lower volume per urination event, tend to excrete lower amounts of nitrogen per urination event and so represent a lower risk to the environmen­t.”

This knowledge has led to AgResearch developing the concept of an environmen­tal nitrogen herd test to identify and manage cows based on urinary-nitrogen loss potential.

The concept is similar to routine herd testing for milk quality and production; with a service provider deploying the urine sensor technology on a dairy farm to provide an accurate estimate of an individual cow’s urination frequency and volume per event.

This informs the urinary nitrogen loss potential of individual cows in the dairy herd.

“Once farmers have this farmspecif­ic urinary nitrogen loss informatio­n of their dairy herd, this could be used in a decision support tool like Overseer to allow potential immediate benefits in reducing farm nitrogen loss relative to using a default model value,” Welten said.

“Furthermor­e, farmers can then use it to make farm management decisions, such as breeding and culling, to move their dairy herd towards lower nitrogen loss potential and thereby provide the opportunit­y to achieve sustained reductions — year on year — in nitrogen leaching loss.”

The research behind the sensor developmen­t was recognised recently when AgResearch’s Cattle Urine Sensor team won the Science and Technology Award at the 2023 Kudos Awards in Hamilton.

“It’s fantastic to have that recognitio­n given over five years of developmen­t,” Welten said.

The sensors were lightweigh­t, simple to use and low-cost, he said.

“Their use can be easily scaled up and requires no capital investment in farm infrastruc­ture, with minimal effect on daily farm management practices.

“Our current research is assessing farm-level benefits of this concept on farm nitrogen loss, using case-study dairy farms linked with modelling funded by the Ministry for Primary Industries.

“We are looking forward to the potential large-scale adoption of this concept in the future by New Zealand dairy farmers as a new tool to mitigate farm nitrogen loss.”

 ?? Photo / AgResearch ?? AgResearch senior scientist Brendon Welten displays one of the cattle urine sensors.
Photo / AgResearch AgResearch senior scientist Brendon Welten displays one of the cattle urine sensors.

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