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Technological,environmental and biological factors: referent variance values for infrared imaging of the bovine
Authors:Yuri R. Montanholi  Melissa Lim  Alaina Macdonald  Brock A. Smith  Christy Goldhawk  Karen Schwartzkopf-Genswein  Stephen P. Miller
Affiliation:.Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1 Canada ;.Department of Plant and Animal Sciences, Dalhousie University, Truro, NS B2N 5E3 Canada ;.Monsanto, Headingley, MB R3T 6E3 Canada ;.Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Lethbridge, AB T1J 4B1 Canada ;.Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 4Z6 Canada ;.Invermay Agricultural Centre, AgResearch Limited, Mosgiel, 9053 New Zealand
Abstract:

Background

Despite its variety of potential applications, the wide implementation of infrared technology in cattle production faces technical, environmental and biological challenges similar to other indicators of metabolic state. Nine trials, divided into three classes (technological, environmental and biological factors) were conducted to illustrate the influence of these factors on body surface temperature assessed through infrared imaging.

Results

Evaluation of technological factors indicated the following: measurements of body temperatures were strongly repeatable when taken within 10 s; appropriateness of differing infrared camera technologies was influenced by distance to the target; and results were consistent when analysis of thermographs was compared between judges. Evaluation of environmental factors illustrated that wind and debris caused decreases in body surface temperatures without affecting metabolic rate; additionally, body surface temperature increased due to sunlight but returned to baseline values within minutes of shade exposure. Examination/investigation/exploration of animal factors demonstrated that exercise caused an increase in body surface temperature and metabolic rate. Administration of sedative and anti-sedative caused changes on body surface temperature and metabolic rate, and during late pregnancy a foetal thermal imprint was visible through abdominal infrared imaging.

Conclusion

The above factors should be considered in order to standardize operational procedures for taking thermographs, thereby optimizing the use of such technology in cattle operations.
Keywords:Body heat loss   Convective heat loss   Infrared imaging   Oxygen consumption   Pharmacodynamics
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