reviewJournal of Dairy ScienceJun 1, 2003BRONZE OA

Effects of Heat-Stress on Production in Dairy Cattle

University of Georgia

PubMed
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Abstract

The southeastern United States is characterized as humid subtropical and is subject to extended periods of high ambient temperature and relative humidity. Because the primary nonevaporative means of cooling for the cow (radiation, conduction, convection) become less effective with rising ambient temperature, the cow becomes increasingly reliant upon evaporative cooling in the form of sweating and panting. High relative humidity compromises evaporative cooling, so that under hot, humid conditions common to the Southeast in summer the dairy cow cannot dissipate sufficient body heat to prevent a rise in body temperature. Increasing air temperature, temperature-humidity index and rising rectal temperature above…

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1,944
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Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Environmental science
  • Relative humidity
  • Evaporative cooler
  • Heat index
  • Humidity
  • Heat stress
  • Ventilation (architecture)
  • Dry matter
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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