Data from: Validation of 1-0 and instantaneous sampling for quantifying oral behaviors in milk-fed dairy calves
Oral behaviors, including feeding, drinking, grooming, and non-nutritive behaviors, are used as indicators of health and welfare in dairy calves, but continuous measurement of these behaviors can be labor intensive. Instantaneous sampling is often used to save labor but has only been validated for f...
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Zusammenfassung: | Oral behaviors, including feeding, drinking, grooming, and non-nutritive
behaviors, are used as indicators of health and welfare in dairy calves,
but continuous measurement of these behaviors can be labor intensive.
Instantaneous sampling is often used to save labor but has only been
validated for feeding behavior in calves. One-zero sampling may be an
appropriate strategy well suited to capturing the rapid performance of
non-nutritive behaviors. Our objective was to validate 1-0 and
instantaneous sampling for measurement of oral behaviors around the time
of bottle delivery against true values. Eleven Holstein heifer calves were
housed individually, provided water and fed a diet of starter grain and
milk replacer (4.8 – 5.6 L/d step-up) via a bottle. When calves were 23 ±
7 d old, they were video recorded for 30 min before and after the morning
2.5 ± 0.2 L milk meal from approximately 0900 – 1000 h. We measured
ruminating, eating, drinking water, sucking milk, grooming, non-nutritive
oral manipulation, and tongue flicks continuously and with instantaneous
and 1-0 sampling at 5-, 10-, 30-, and 60-s intervals. We also examined the
effect of instantaneous timing within these intervals. Estimates obtained
through subsampling were compared to true values with regression analysis.
The subsampling interval was determined to represent true values if the
coefficient of determination ≥ 0.9, slope = 1, intercept = 0, and relative
error < 10%. Ruminating, drinking water, and eating were not
performed by all 11 calves and were not included in the analysis. The
proportion of time performing non-nutritive oral manipulation, grooming,
and tongue flicks generated by continuous and 1-0 sampling were highly
correlated but were consistently overestimated by 1-0 sampling, especially
as calves spent more time engaged in these behaviors. Sucking milk was
accurately represented at intervals of less than 30 s, likely due to most
sucking bouts continuing for at least 150 s at a time, and low
between-calf variability compared to the other behaviors. Different start
times within a given instantaneous interval resulted in wide variance in
discrepancies between subsampling and continuous recording for all
behaviors. We conclude that around milk feeding, 1-0 sampling is an
appropriate choice to represent stimulus-elicited behavior, such as
sucking milk in a milk-restricted system. However, time engaged in short,
highly variable, or intermittent behaviors is not reliably captured via
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DOI: | 10.25338/b85s7m |