IceRobotics ICEQUBE MOTION SENSOR User Manual CowAlert User Guide FCCx

IceRobotics Limited MOTION SENSOR CowAlert User Guide FCCx

Contents

USER MAUAL 1

    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 1  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012            User Guide  V.14 – Oct 2012 English (UK)      Information and Support Enquiries: Email:  support@cowalert.com Tel:   +44 131 541 2010
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 2  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  Contents 1 Introduction ....................................................................................................................................4 1.1 The origins of the IceQube and the CowAlert System............................................................4 1.2 Minimum System Requirements to view CowAlert................................................................5 2 Getting connected to CowAlert ......................................................................................................6 3 CowAlert Home Page ......................................................................................................................8 3.1 Navigation Bar Details (User profile and language selection) ................................................8 3.2 Navigation Bar Details.............................................................................................................9 3.3 Search for Cow or IceQube Numbers ...................................................................................10 4 Behaviour Graphs & Summary Information .................................................................................11 4.1 Behaviour graph: Hours view................................................................................................11 4.2 Behaviour Graph: Multi-day view.........................................................................................12 4.3 Behaviour Tables...................................................................................................................13 4.4 IceScore Mobility ..................................................................................................................14 4.5 Interpreting the graphs.........................................................................................................15 5 Heat Alerts ....................................................................................................................................16 5.1 Viewing recent heat alerts and their associated behaviour graphs .....................................16 5.2 Viewing all Heat alerts ..........................................................................................................17 5.3 Receiving Heat Alerts by email .............................................................................................17 6 Lying Behaviour.............................................................................................................................18 6.1 Lying behaviour for the individual cow.................................................................................18 6.2 Lying behaviour for the group or herd..................................................................................20 6.3 Lying behaviour graphs for an individual cow ......................................................................21 7 Managing Cows and IceQubes......................................................................................................22 7.1 Getting started – creating the initial association between Cows and IceQubes..................22 7.2 Generating a list of Cow numbers ........................................................................................22 7.3 Generating a list of IceQubes................................................................................................24 7.4 Attaching an IceQube to a Cow within CowAlert .................................................................25 7.5 Adding new cows to CowAlert..............................................................................................26 7.6 Detaching an IceQube from a cow number..........................................................................27 7.7 Deleting a Cow and its record from CowAlert ......................................................................28 8 Reports..........................................................................................................................................28 8.1 Lying Time .............................................................................................................................28 8.2 IceScore Mobility ..................................................................................................................30
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 3  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  8.3 IceScore Mobility Historic Performance ...............................................................................31 8.4 IceQube Population ..............................................................................................................31 9 Site Information ............................................................................................................................32 9.1 User Settings ............................................................................................................................32 10 Help and Support .....................................................................................................................33 11 Feedback..................................................................................................................................33 12 Attaching an IceQube to a cow’s leg........................................................................................34 13 Removing an IceQube from a cow’s leg...................................................................................35
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 4  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  1 Introduction  1.1 The origins of the IceQube and the CowAlert System  IceRobotics  has  been  supplying  animal  science  institutions  worldwide  with  specialist  behaviour monitoring  solutions  since  2005.  Its  IceTag  and  IceQube  sensors  are  used  by  leading  livestock researchers in over 20 countries to enable research into health, welfare and behaviour, principally in dairy cattle. Research based on these sensors appears in highly regarded journals such as the Journal of Dairy Science and the Journal of Applied Animal Behaviour Science. Recent published papers have covered  diverse  themes  including  oestrus  expression,  lameness  patterns,  different  bedding  types, hoof trimming methods and feed intake. The  IceQube  was  developed  in  2008  from  the  proven  IceTag  platform  to  provide  a  sensor  that  is suitable  both  for  large-scale  research  and  commercial  farm  applications.  It  was  launched  in  2010 after extensive field-trialling across many herds and sites. The IceTag and IceQube are designed to be fully compatible with each other to ensure that ongoing research insights can be extended into practical applications in commercial farming. Both  sensors  use  a  3-axis  accelerometer,  capturing precise  data  on  the  cow’s  movements  several times per second, providing highly detailed activity and behaviour information. The CowAlert system was developed to provide advanced management and analysis capability for the data generated by the IceQube.  The  system’s  internet  connectivity  allows  large  amounts  of  data  to  be  securely  stored  and extensively analysed.  Users can  keep  information over several  generations  of animals  if  they wish and complex mathematical analysis and calculations can be performed which would not be possible on  older-generation  stand-alone  systems.  Information  from  different  sites  can  be  compared  or combined  and  users  can  access  the  system  from  any  location  with  an  internet  connection. Information  can  therefore  be  shared  remotely  with  third  parties  such  as  vets  or  feed  advisors  if desired. The IceQube’s excellent heat detection performance has been verified through a series of scientific trials  involving  progesterone  testing.  With  the  IceTag  established  as  the  market  leading  choice  of dairy animal scientists, the award winning IceQube and CowAlert system is now being selected by the most progressive dairy farmers. CowAlert and IceQube are Registered Trade Marks of IceRobotics Ltd
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 5  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   1.2 Minimum System Requirements to view CowAlert  Using your unique User ID and password you can access CowAlert from anywhere there is a reliable internet connection and a modern web browser, whether that is the farm office or from the other side of the world. There is no software to be installed and all updates are automated so the most recent  version  will  always  be  available.  Accessing  CowAlert  through  an  internet  broadband connection is preferred as this provides good speed and reliability. CowAlert  can  therefore  be  viewed  on  any  internet-enabled  device  such  as  a  PC,  Mac,  laptop  or tablet PC. It is suggested that equipment with a reasonable sized screen is used to ensure full benefit from the advanced graphing capability.  Recommended web browsers include:  • Firefox version 4  • Google Chrome (this updates itself so the latest version should always be installed) • Internet Explorer 8 • Safari for mobile devices
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 6  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  2 Getting connected to CowAlert  1. You should have a modern internet browser (such as Google Chrome, Firefox 4, Internet Explorer 8 or Safari) installed on your PC or equivalent.   2. Ensure that you are connected to the internet 3. Open your internet browser 4. In the address bar, type this address and then press enter  www.cowalert.com  5. You should now see this login screen:
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 7  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  6. Click on Client login which will take you to the login page.  7. Enter your username and password and press Enter – this will take you to the Home Page of the CowAlert system for your farm. Your username and password are unique to you. Please do not share these details with others as they  will  then  be  able  to  make  changes  that  may  affect  your  data  and  therefore  the  effective functioning of the  system. If  however, you would  like to authorise  someone  else to have access, please  email  support@cowalert.com  and  a  separate  username  and  password  can  be  issued  for each additional user. If you forget your password or believe that it is no longer secure, please email support@cowalert.com and a replacement will be issued.         TIP: Bookmark your CowAlert page, or set it up as your Home Page on your browser, so you can access it quickly in the future
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 8  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  3 CowAlert Home Page  The Home Page allows you to access the different functions of the system – it is like a Table of Contents to direct you to where you want to go in the system. The functions are: • Animal activity graphs • Heat alerts • Health alerts if you have subscribed to receive them • Average herd lying times • IceQube management functions The illustration below provides an overview of the CowAlert front page.         3.1 Navigation Bar Details (User profile and language selection)  Navigation bar allows you to access different features of CowAlert The number of cows in heat. Click on any number takes you directly to the detail for that cow (see section 4) Average lying time of the herd over 24 hours The middle section shows the download performance and the latest downloads and times.  Click  on  your  farm  name  on  any page  to  come  back  to  this  front page. It acts as a “Home” button. Click here to logout from the system and select your language preference. Users can logout from any page. Click this link to email the heats summary to someone. A pop up window will appear and you enter the email address  IceScore Mobility. Average Mobility Score of the Herd, plus indicator of the number of  animals flagged as green, amber and red. Poor mobility scores may indicate lameness or another health problem. measure of   a.user The Dairy Farm
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 9  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012    3.2 Navigation Bar Details  Separate sections will be covered  in more detail below.             Click  on  orange  button  to  open up  user  profile  options  such  as language selection and to logout. Other languages will be added as they become available. Heats:  Accesses  list  of heats – see section 5 Manage: Associating cows with IceQubes, removing attachments, adding cows – see section7 Help: Send an email to support@icerobotics.com – see section 13 Cow / IceQube: Search directly by Cow or IceQube number Reports: Accesses lying time, IceScore and IceQube reports - see section 8 The Dairy Farm Site: Accesses information and settings – see section 9
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 10  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  3.3 Search for Cow or IceQube Numbers           Use the same process to search for an IceQube number, using the IceQube field.       Search  by  Cow:  Entering  a number  1  shows  all  cows  that have  the  number  1  in  cow number Adding  a  second  digit,  in  this case  a  2,  searches  for  the number 12 and displays all cow numbers with this number pair. Select the cow you wish to view and  left  mouse  click  to  select, or  enter  a  cow  number  and <enter>
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 11  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  4 Behaviour Graphs & Summary Information    The behaviour graph page is divided into a graph and several tables.  4.1 Behaviour graph: Hours view  The Hours activity graph provides more detailed information on the animal’s behaviour. This view is particularly useful when looking at heat events or suspected health anomalies.  The Hours graph can be accessed either from: • Selecting a heat event and clicking on the chart icon   (see section 5) • Selecting the Hours tab on the main cow activity screen                  Behaviour shows detailed  behaviour information for the cow. See more in section 8.1 Select the time period (15 hours to 90 days) to view the data for that period Scroll back/forward in time Options to print and export the graph  Standing/lying time is denoted by the yellow line. Here the cow is standing. The pink line shows the MotionIndex. This is a measure of how active the animal is. Note the raised activity level during oestrus. The blue line shows the Step Count. Note that the MotionIndex is a more accurate measure of activity. Clicking on any of these headings hides/shows them on the graph The blue triangle shows when the IceQube downloaded. The Hours view is fixed width. Data will progressively fill the window.
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 12  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   4.2 Behaviour Graph: Multi-day view  An example of a 30 day activity graph is shown below. The activity graphs include the following information: • MotionIndex – how active the animal has been (thick pink line) • MotionIndex 7 day average (thin pink line) • Lying/standing (thick grey line) • Lying time 7 day average (thin grey line) • Steps (thick blue line) • Steps 7 day average (thin blue line) • IceScore         Click on any of these headings to show or hide that feature on the graph Lying time (higher values indicate that the cow is lying for longer)  MotionIndex    IceScore: Numbers above 2 denote a potential health problem Lying time average. Note that this is very consistent for this cow.
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 13  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  4.3 Behaviour Tables  Several tables are shown on the screen along with the behaviour graph.            The Events Table provides a list of the dates of previous Heats. The  IceQube  Attachments  table  provides  details  on  when  IceQubes  were  attached  and  removed from the cow, and the associated IceQube numbers. The Summary Information Table provides summary information for the current day, the average of the last 7 days and the average of the last 14 days  Summary information on the cow, including optional Group allocation and Eartag number. The table shows the number of the IceQube that is currently attached, when the IceQube last downloaded, and when the last heat event occurred.   Delete a cow by clicking here . Note that this will remove the animal from the cow list along with all its data. The data can not be recovered, so this function should be used with caution. Click on Edit to edit the Cow Number, Group  or Eartag fields. Use Cancel to exit without saving.
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 14  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   4.4 IceScore Mobility  IceScore is an optional paid-for subscription service subject to a free trial period during its validation phase. It provides an alert for animals that exhibit a change in mobility that is likely to be related to some sort of health issue such as lameness or mastitis. The example below shows an IceScore trace for a cow that was confirmed to have gone lame.       See also section 8.2 for further information on IceScore Mobility. Dairyman reported problem here,  2 or 3 days into the problem IceScore identified a mobility issue
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 15  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   4.5 Interpreting the graphs  To assist in identifying unusual behaviour patterns it is useful to know the expected range of “normal” behaviours.  Whilst this can vary between farms, the table below shows the typical ranges for Motion Index, Step Count and Lying Time.  Behaviour Measure  Indoor  Grazing Motion Index  5000-10000  10000+  (can be as high as 30000, 40000 depending on how far cows have to walk to pasture)  Step Count  1000-3000 (generally around 1/4 of the Motion Index) 3000-10000 Lying time  8-16 hours. Note that scientific experts recommend that dairy cows should lie for 12 hours per day1 Low herd or individual lying times could be an indicator of several factors including illness or cow comfort issues. 8-16 hours (often higher outdoors than indoors)                                                             1 Jensen, M.B., L.J. Pedersen, and L. Munksgaard. 2005. The effect of reward duration on demand functions  for rest in dairy heifers and lying requirements as measured by demand functions. Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 90:207-217
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 16  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   5 Heat Alerts   5.1 Viewing recent heat alerts and their associated behaviour graphs   Heat alerts are shown in the left-hand table on the farm homepage.                   Clicking the chart icon opens the Hours behaviour graph so the user can view the activity around the Heat This column gives the time the heat started. The search box below it also allows further refinement. Click column header to order by date /time This is the recommended AI window and is set by the farm by selecting Site from the main menu bar, and then Settings (see section 9.1) Click the cow number to show activity  graphs for this animal Click  on  any  row  to  open  the details of the highlighted alerts Click  to  open drop-down menu  to  select different search criteria  Use the Ignore button to cancel the Heat alert (eg if caused by a known event). Use the Info button to view further details and to reinstate an alert (eg if Ignored by accident)
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 17  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  5.2 Viewing all Heat alerts  A list of all cows and Heat alerts can be accessed by selecting Heats from the top menu bar.        5.3 Receiving Heat Alerts by email  In addition to viewing heat alerts at any time via CowAlert, automated email messages can be sent to specific email addresses. To set up automated email alerts, email support@cowalert.com with the following information: • Farm name • Name and email address of the person/people to receive email alerts • When the email alert should be received, eg once a day, sent at 3pm, or twice a day, sent at 6am and 6pm. The email that is sent will include heat alerts generated within the last 72 hours and will look like the example below. Note that clicking on the cow number will show the relevant activity graph.   The table can be sorted Cow or Heat Start by clicking on the appropriate column heading Note that the cows within a current AI time window are highlighted in yellow. See section 9.1 on how to set the AI window.
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 18  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012  6 Lying Behaviour 6.1 Lying behaviour for the individual cow  For the individual cow, CowAlert provides: • Cow-level: Graphical overview of lying time and average lying time (Activity graphs) • Cow-level:  Total  Lying  time  per  day,  and  as  a  7  and  14  day  average  (table  located  below activity  graph  for  the  specific  cow)  and  as  a  graphical  view  (Behaviour  view  option  on Activity graph) • Cow-level:  Number  of  lying  bouts  each  day.  A  lying  bout  is  when  a  cow  changes  from standing to lying to standing. (table located below activity graph for the specific cow) • Herd-level: average number of hours the herd is lying. • Typically she will have a very similar number of bouts each day and any change to that may indicate a potential problem.  Below  is  an  example  of  an  Hours  graph,  showing  only  the  MotionIndex  and  the  lying/standing patterns. Note  the  increased activity  and increased standing time  associated with the  Heat event. The steps and downloads are hidden by deselecting them in the key.        Hours graph with Steps and Downloads hidden from view by clicking on those headings
    © IceRobotics Ltd 2012  Page 19  V0.15 EN(UK)Nov 2012   Below is an example of a 90 day graph showing only the lying time plus 7 day average lying time.               Hiding the Steps and MotionIndex from view clearly shows the lying pattern and lying time trend of this animal.

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