Lm. Lidfors, BEHAVIORAL-EFFECTS OF SEPARATING THE DAIRY CALF IMMEDIATELY OR 4 DAYSPOSTPARTUM, Applied animal behaviour science, 49(3), 1996, pp. 269-283
This study investigated the behavioural effects of separating the dair
y calf from its mother at birth or after 4 days and how the mother-you
ng attachment and suckling behaviour developed during these 4 days pos
t partum (p.p.). Observations were made during 2 h sampling sessions p
er day on 33 Swedish Red and White and 6 Swedish Friesian mother young
pairs. They were either kept together during 96 h (treatment T n = 24
) in a calving pen (11 m(2)) or separated immediately p.p. (treatment
S n = 15) with the cow kept in the calving pen and the calf placed in
a single crate (1.2 m(2)) at a distance of 5 m from the cow and in sig
ht of each other. Calves on treatment T were standing earlier p.p. tha
n calves on treatment S (60 vs. 201 min p.p., P less than or equal to
0.05). However, seven of these calves (32%) did not suckle successfull
y within 4 h. p.p. Mean duration until placenta expulsion was 245 min
and 77% of the cows showed placentophagia, but there were no effects o
f treatment. During the 2 h p.p. cows on treatment T vocalised more of
ten (P less than or equal to 0.001), were lying less (P less than or e
qual to 0.001), were less inactive (P less than or equal to 0.05) and
performed less oral behaviour (P less than or equal to 0.01) than cows
on treatment S. Calves on treatment T vocalised less often during all
4 days p.p. (P < 0.001) and licked themselves less often during the s
econd, third and fourth day p.p. (P less than or equal to 0.05) than c
alves on treatment S. When the calf was separated at 96 h, cows on tre
atment T vocalised more often (P less than or equal to 0.001), were ly
ing less (P less than or equal to 0.05) and ruminated less (P less tha
n or equal to 0.01) than did cows on treatment S. Calves on treatment
T were lying less (P less than or equal to 0.01) and performed more or
al behaviour (P less than or equal to 0.05) after separation than did
calves on treatment S. Cows on treatment T were within 1 m of the calf
during most observations, but this decreased during the 4 days p.p. (
P less than or equal to 0.01). Maternal sniffing and licking was most
common during the first 2 h p.p., and decreased during the 4 days (P l
ess than or equal to 0.0001). Total suckling time per 24 h decreased d
uring the first 4 days (P less than or equal to 0.01), but suckling fr
equency and bout duration did not change over the 4 days. The conclusi
on from this study is that both cow and calf are stimulated to higher
activity immediately post partum when kept together, but that separati
on after 4 days has an effect on some behaviours of both cows and calv
es.