Environmental and animal welfare impacts of different dairy production systems: a holistic approach.

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bristol
Department Name: Clinical Veterinary Science

Abstract

Conventional UK dairy production, where cattle have on average 6 months grazing and spend the winter months housed
has been shown to have high environmental impacts on greenhouse gas emissions, biodiversity, soil health and water
pollution. The research and farming communities have identified two potentially more sustainable approaches:
regenerative grazing systems, which integrate conservation and food production on the same land ("land sharing"); and
sustainably intensified systems, which separate high-yield food production farms from protected habitats for conservation
("land sparing"). Since these dairy systems differ in the management practices they use, they result in different
environmental, economic, and animal welfare outcomes. Moreover, it is likely that the rising societal awareness of dairy
production environmental concerns has affected public attitudes regarding dairy production systems and the milk they
produce.
Assessing animal welfare at the farm level is time consuming and thus, the use of artificial intelligence (AI) surveillance
tools (aided by video cameras) has been proposed to identify key animal welfare traits in housed systems but has not been
extended under grazing conditions yet. This project aims to evaluate the environmental, economic and animal welfare
aspects of conventional, regenerative and sustainably intensified dairy systems, including through novel vision-based
machine learning technologies, as well as societal perceptions towards them.
The successful candidate will have the opportunity to participate of a multidisciplinary group where academics experts in
sustainable animal production, economic and environmental footprint assessment, animal behaviour and welfare, data
science machine vision and artificial intelligence and public perception evaluation have joined together to undertake a
comprehensive evaluation of the dairy production systems. The student will benefit from having access to the University
of Bristol and Rothamsted Research facilities and will receive training and obtain the skills needed to undertake an in deep
evaluation of the different aspects of the animal production systems. Moreover, the student will have the opportunity to
directly engage with farmers, researchers and advisors from our partner, Pasture-Fed Livestock Association (PFLA).

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
BB/T008741/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2028
2737956 Studentship BB/T008741/1 01/10/2022 30/09/2026 Sara Hall