Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Quantifying the frequency and volume of urine deposition by grazing sheep using tri-axial accelerometers

Karina A. Marsden, Lucy Lush, J. Anders Holmberg, Ian Harris, M. J. Whelan, Susan M. Webb, Andrew J. King, Rory P. Wilson, Davey L. Jones, Alice F. Charteris, L. M. Cardenas, David R. Chadwick

animal · 2021

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Summary

Urine patches deposited in pasture by grazing animals are sites of reactive nitrogen (N) loss to the environment due to high concentrations of N exceeding pasture uptake requirements. In order to upscale N losses from the urine patch, several urination parameters are required, including where, when and how often urination events occur as well as the volume and chemical composition. There are limited data available in this respect, especially for sheep. Here, we seek to address this knowledge gap by using non-invasive sensor-based technology (accelerometers) on ewes grazing in situ, using a Boolean algorithm to detect urination events in the accelerometer signal. We conducted an initial study with penned Welsh Mountain ewes (n = 5), with accelerometers attached to the hind, to derive urine

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1016/j.animal.2021.100234
Catalogue ID
SNmoef2dnd-3r4w0e
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