Tympanic temperature in confined beef cattle exposed to excessive heat load
Author(s) -
T. L. Mader,
J. B. Gaughan,
L. J. Johnson,
G. L. Hahn
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
international journal of biometeorology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.763
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1432-1254
pISSN - 0020-7128
DOI - 10.1007/s00484-009-0229-0
Subject(s) - zoology , heat stress , potassium , sodium , beef cattle , crossbreed , chemistry , hot weather , body weight , biology , meteorology , endocrinology , physics , organic chemistry
Angus crossbred yearling steers (n = 168) were used to evaluate effects on performance and tympanic temperature (TT) of feeding additional potassium and sodium to steers exposed to excessive heat load (maximum daily ambient temperature exceeded 32°C for three consecutive days) during seasonal summer conditions. Steers were assigned one of four treatments: (1) control; (2) potassium supplemented (diet containing 2.10% KHCO₃); (3) sodium supplemented (diet containing 1.10% NaCl); or (4) potassium and sodium supplemented (diet containing 2.10% KHCO₃ and 1.10% NaCl). Overall, additional KHCO₃ at the 2% level or NaCl at the 1% level did not improve performance or heat stress tolerance with these diet formulations. However, the addition of KHCO₃ did enhance water intake. Independent of treatment effects, TT of cattle displaying high, moderate, or low levels of stress suggest that cattle that do not adequately cool down at night are prone to achieving greater body temperatures during a subsequent hot day. Cattle that are prone to get hot but can cool at night can keep average tympanic temperatures at or near those of cattle that tend to consistently maintain lower peak and mean body temperatures. In addition, during cooler and moderately hot periods, cattle change TT in a stair-step or incremental pattern, while under hot conditions, average TT of group-fed cattle moves in conjunction with ambient conditions, indicating that thermoregulatory mechanisms are at or near maximum physiological capacity.
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