Estimating body weight in conventional growing pigs using a depth camera
•We validated the iDOL65 camera for body weight (BW) estimation in pigs on 2 farms.•Estimated BW satisfactorily agreed with scale-based BW at individual and pen level.•The overall BW estimation error was low (≤3.6%) at individual and pen level.•The iDOL65 represents a potential solution for on-farm...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Smart agricultural technology 2023-02, Vol.3, p.100117, Article 100117 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •We validated the iDOL65 camera for body weight (BW) estimation in pigs on 2 farms.•Estimated BW satisfactorily agreed with scale-based BW at individual and pen level.•The overall BW estimation error was low (≤3.6%) at individual and pen level.•The iDOL65 represents a potential solution for on-farm BW estimation in pigs.
Automated body weight (BW) estimation can be a useful tool for continuous monitoring of growth in commercial pigs, whereas deviations could indicate welfare problems. We validated a depth camera for BW estimation in 251 conventional growing pigs on two farms. Scale-based BW of individual pigs was used as gold standard (Farm 1: 107 pigs, BW range: 16–130 kg, recorded on three days; Farm 2: 144 pigs BW range: 20–114 kg, recorded on nine days). The camera was placed above the individual feeding station (Farm 1) or multi-partitioned feeder (Farm 2) and combined with a radio frequency identification system. Whenever a pig visited the feeding site, three-dimensional images were taken, and all individual daily images were used to calculate the median individual estimated BW. The pen estimated BW was calculated by taking the median of all daily picture estimates. A very high agreement (Concordance Correlation Coefficient >0.96) between scale-based BW and estimated BW was found on both farms at individual and pen level. Additionally, the individual-level and pen-level BW estimation errors of the median weight over the fattening period were low on both farms (≤3.6%). Yet, the camera's BW estimation performance decreased in pigs weighing >110 kg on Farm 1. Whereas, on Farm 2, the performance decreased when pigs weighed approximately 60 kg and were subjected to a typical dietary change, which potentially increased the competition for access to the multi-partitioned feeder and, consequently, limited body boundary detection. |
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ISSN: | 2772-3755 2772-3755 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.atech.2022.100117 |