Omran, F., Hamdon, H. (2018). Transportation, Adaptive and Productive Performance of Transported Buffalo Herd in New Environment. Journal of Animal and Poultry Production, 9(3), 191-196. doi: 10.21608/jappmu.2018.39798
Fayza Omran; H. Hamdon. "Transportation, Adaptive and Productive Performance of Transported Buffalo Herd in New Environment". Journal of Animal and Poultry Production, 9, 3, 2018, 191-196. doi: 10.21608/jappmu.2018.39798
Omran, F., Hamdon, H. (2018). 'Transportation, Adaptive and Productive Performance of Transported Buffalo Herd in New Environment', Journal of Animal and Poultry Production, 9(3), pp. 191-196. doi: 10.21608/jappmu.2018.39798
Omran, F., Hamdon, H. Transportation, Adaptive and Productive Performance of Transported Buffalo Herd in New Environment. Journal of Animal and Poultry Production, 2018; 9(3): 191-196. doi: 10.21608/jappmu.2018.39798
Transportation, Adaptive and Productive Performance of Transported Buffalo Herd in New Environment
1Animal Production Research Institute, Dokki, Giza, Egypt
2Department of Animal Production, Faculty of Agriculture, New Valley Branch, Assuit University, Egypt.
Abstract
The study was carried out in El-Nobarya Station, Beheira Governorate and El-Nataf El-Kadeem Station, Kafr El-Sheikh Governorate. Twenty-two buffalo cows were included in the experiment. Animals were transported\d to El-Nobarya station to establish a buffalo herd in this station.The experiment included two stages, the first stage aimed to study the effect of transportation and the second stage aimed to study the effect of acclimatization in El-Nobarya station. Meteorological data were collected and recorded including air temperature (AT, °C), relative humidity (RH, %) and wind speed (WS, Km/hr.), from which temperature humidity index (THI) was calculated. The following physiological and hematological parameters were recorded: rectal temperature (RT, °C), respiration rate (RR, r/min), hemoglobin (Hb, g/dl), hematocrit value (Ht, %) and differential counts of leukocyte types; Neutrophils (Ne), Lymphocytes (Ly), Eosinophils (Eo), Monocytes (Mo) and Basophils (Ba). Meanwhile productive traits included dam weight at calving (DW, KG), birth weight of calves (BW, Kg), weaning weight of calves (WW, KG), calving interval period (CI, day), lactation period (LP, day), total milk yield (TMY, Kg) and persistency (PE, %).The present work was conducted to compare between physiological and productive performance of buffaloes before and after transportation. The main obtained results are: the decrease in THI and increase in WS were the main meteorological factors affecting physiological performance for animals. The high difference between animal body temperature and house temperature in El-Nobarya had been ameliorated by the effect of low THI and high WS. Transportation influenced significantly physiological (RR and RT) and hematological parameters. It increased significantly RR, RT, Ne and Mo and decreased significantly Ht, Hb, Ly and Eo after sustainability of animals. However, productive traits of the first season after transportation was better than before transportation except TMY due to better managerial and environmental conditions. Buffaloes can acclimatized to transportation stress during the first season as no significant differences were found between physiological and productive traits between the four season after transportation except milk yield and milk curve persistency which require three seasons to come back to pre-transportation levels. It could be concluded that buffaloes under conditions in El-Nobarya were better than those in El-Nataf El-Kadeem due to better environmental conditions (lower THI and higher WS) and management.