posted on 2017-08-08, 15:13authored byFernanda Gatti de Oliveira Nascimento, Hellen Cris Pinto Aguiar, Amanda Karen Ferreira Martins, Igor Carrijo Fernandes de Araújo, Gustavo Moya Rodrigues, Ednaldo Carvalho Guimarães, Mara Regina Bueno de Mattos Nascimento
<p>The Temperature Humidity Index (THI) was first used to evaluate human
beings and later it was adapted to be used in production animals, especially
dairy cows. The efficiency of this index is not known for dairy calves,
especially the crossbred ones. The aim of this study was to compare different
equations of temperature-humidity
index as heat stress indicator in crossbred dairy calves in tropical
environment. Twenty-seven crossbred dairy calves, males and
females, housed in Argentine model’s calf, were evaluated to respiratory rate,
rectal temperature and surface body temperature on 2<sup>nd</sup>, 15<sup>th</sup>,
30<sup>th</sup> and 60<sup>th</sup> days of live, totalizing 108 observations.
The environment was evaluated at the moment of each animal data collection and the
dry bulb temperature and wet bulb temperature were recorded, and used to
estimate relative humidity, partial air vapour pressure and dew point
temperature. Nine different equations of temperature-humidity index were
calculated. ANOVA followed by Tukey test of mean comparison with 5% of
significance and Pearson correlation analysis were performed using the Action
program. Respiratory rate, rectal temperature and surface body temperature did
not differ between the ages. Only in 4.62% of the observations calves had a
respiratory rate between 60 to 80 movements per minute, which represents a
moderate heat stress, and in 5% of the observations calves had a rectal
temperature above 39.5 °C, indicating that they were not able to maintain homeothermy. In 25% of
the observations presented smaller gradients between surface body temperature
and environmental temperature, indicating that in 75% of observations the
convective heat loss was favored. The average
temperature (21 °C) was near the maximum temperature recommended to dairy
calves of European origin, which ranges of 5 °C to 20 °C, but the thermal
comfort temperature is not known for crossbred dairy calves in a tropical
environment. The majority mean values of THI indicated a comfort situation. The
correlation of dry bulb temperature and the physiological parameters was
positive and significant. The respiratory rate and surface body temperature had
a significant and positive correlation with the temperature humidity indexes. The
correlations of physiological data with THI sensible heat-based were higher
than the others. The THI sensible heat-based is the equation that better
represents the comfort situation of crossbred dairy calves in a tropical
environment.</p>