Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

Remote Tracking Location and Activity of Beef Cattle on Pasture Utilizing GPS-Enabled Technology

Susan B. Markus; Carien Vandenberg; Janet Nowosad

Animal Science Cases · 2025

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Summary

This paper presents a case study demonstrating the use of GPS technology to remotely track beef cattle location and activity patterns whilst grazing on pasture. The work likely evaluates the practicality and potential applications of such monitoring systems for improved pasture management and animal welfare assessment in extensive grazing systems. The findings are relevant to understanding how technology can support data-driven decision-making in pastoral beef production.

UK applicability

GPS-enabled cattle monitoring systems have potential application in UK pasture-based beef farming, particularly where extensive grazing systems predominate in upland and hill-farming regions. However, adoption barriers including technology cost, infrastructure requirements, and data management skills may limit uptake among smaller-scale UK producers.

Key measures

Cattle location coordinates, movement distance, grazing duration, pasture utilisation patterns, spatial distribution across paddocks

Outcomes reported

The study evaluated the application of GPS-enabled tracking technology to monitor the spatial location, movement patterns, and grazing activity of beef cattle on pasture. The research likely assessed the feasibility, accuracy and utility of such technology for real-time herd monitoring and management decision-making.

Theme
Measurement & metrics
Subject
Precision livestock farming and technology application
Study type
Research
Study design
Field trial
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
System type
Pasture-based beef
DOI
10.1079/animalsciencecases.2025.0004
Catalogue ID
NRmo9zxr64-03r

Topic tags

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