Comunidad de Negocios Internacionales relacionados con la producción animal
Site:
Aquaculture Mycotoxins Poultry Industry PIG INDUSTRY Dairy Cattle Feed
 NEWS News
New World Beating Boar Goes to War on Feed CostsNew World Beating Boar Goes to War on Feed Costs - 05/08/2008
A new boar bred by UK's pig genetics company JSR Genetics, is consistently achieving a record breaking reduction in feed conversion rates (FCR) - 13.4 per cent less than the UK average - and the lowest achieved by any pig, anywhere in the world...
Technical Articles / Technical Articles' List / Back to Pig Industry
 

Water Measurement in Pig and Poultry Production

Readers' Rating:   Rate this article

Send enviar   (1 Sent)

Who saw this article? New!


Author: Nick Bird - Farmex


Our thanks to the author and Conference Organisers, a Committee consisting of both University and Industry colleagues.

The full paper will appear in the Conference Proceedings ('Recent Advances in Animal Nutrition - 2007', edited by Phil Garnsworthy and Julian Wiseman) published by Nottingham University Press in the autumn of 2007
www.nup.com



Courtesy of the 41st Annual University of Nottingham Feed Conference www.nottingham.ac.uk/biosciences/ah/research/conferences.php




This paper outlines the key issues of water measurement in pig and poultry production in commercial and similar situations. Issues are illustrated using data measured from a range of production sites. Academic research of water intake is very limited, so the information presented is largely qualitative and interpretative.


Introduction

Life is water. It makes up the greater part of body tissues, and the greater part of dietary intake of farmed animals. Without water, animals quickly become ill and die. Despite that, water intake is relatively unexplored territory in commercial production. It tends to be assumed that if it of "adequate" quality with "adequate" availability, then everything will be "OK".

From a pollution and regulatory point of view, there is somewhat more interest in what comes out at one end, than goes in at the other.

This is partly because water is cheap and no one particularly makes money out of it. It matters to producers, plumbers and animals, say, but not to feed companies. At least, not on the face of it. If it has been measured at all, it is merely daily manual readings. This tends to miss most of the information - the signals - in the data.


The Hardware


Water Meters


In commercial scale production, water measurement using standard "utility" type meters, with "pulse" output is cost effective and adequate. Utility type meters cost £50 to £150. More specialist types such as turbine "flow meters" and ultrasonic detectors are also available for more specialist applications - such as measuring for small groups of animals in pens.

In practical terms, meters are "integrating" meters. That is, they measure total (accumulating) volume - a pulse per unit volume of water - not rate of flow. Typically, the unit of measurement (resolution) is 0.5 or 1 litre. Turbine flow meters can be down to 0.01 litres.


Water Meter Issues

  • minimum flow rate
  • pressure drop
  • accuracy
  • scaling and debris

Water meters have a limited dynamic range, and cause a pressure drop. The higher the flow rate, the greater the pressure drop. For that reason, they must be chosen carefully so that flow rates fall in the correct range and, in practical situations, must be at mains pressure.

Below their minimum flow rate, meters typically register "no flow". This is a significant issue since many water systems are worn (standard float valves are only rated for 200,000 operations) and this can lead to large reading errors. It's advisable to maintain systems and replace float valves if installing metering. Accuracy within the specified range is not generally an issue (around 2%).

Scaling and particulate matter (silting up) are a common cause of failure, since farm supplies are usually from a borehole, and farms are very reluctant to use filters or settling tanks.


Data Logging

Manual recording of water use is almost worthless, especially in pig production, and particularly from a diagnostic perspective, so electronic recording is essential.

This means that the "pulse" contacts on the meter are connected to a data logger, which counts up each unit of consumption. Recording every 15 minutes appears to be adequate for detection of data signals, without excessive volumes of data. Water data is of limited use without the relevant associated data such as temperature, number and of animals, etc.

Therefore logging systems should include recording of the other related data.

"On-screen" displays of current readings are of little benefit other than to check that sensors (for water, temperature, etc) are functioning. A data logger suitable for long term use in agricultural surroundings costs from around £1000 for 8 input channels, plus £200 per additional 8 inputs. In practice, cost is dominated by installation cost - due to the long wiring runs.

Due to the distances and wide range of farm layouts, effective wireless data networks have yet to emerge for agricultural situations, but may be expected within the next 3 years/

In practice, on-site staff rarely have sufficiently developed data or interpretative skills and water intake data is generally used off-site. Therefore remote connection via modem (using landline modem, cellular, or broadband) and remote presentation of data are essential.

Modern control and regulation systems (such as Dicam®) have the facility for data logging (added to control functions) and this offers a very cost effective method.

However, data logging capability varies considerably from manufacturer to manufacturer.


Data Signals

Data signals are information or factors within the data that affect the measured value - that is, a change in the measured value indicates a changed parameter or circumstance.
Signals have varying frequencies. The main signals are:

  • Feed intake
  • Growth
  • Body clock and lighting
  • Temperature
  • Feed type and taste
  • Health
  • Feed availability
  • Socialisation, behaviour and habit
  • Water quality
  • Water availability
  • Leakage and dribbling

For example, larger pigs drink more, so increased consumption is an indication of growth. However, this takes place over a long period of time (low frequency data).

The body clock means that water intake varies considerably over each day. This higher frequency is superimposed on the lower frequency growth data. The measured data is therefore a waveform of greater or lesser complexity.



Typical intake pattern for poultry and pigs (2 days)



Uses of Water Intake Data

  • detecting acute issues such as water and feed system failures
  • detecting maintenance issues such as leaking drinkers
  • monitoring growth and batch to batch comparison
  • detecting illness
  • assessing performance and suitability of feed and water delivery systems
  • impact of housing including lighting
  • monitoring labour


Author: Nick Bird - Farmex

Readers' Rating:   Rate this article

   Send   enviar   (1 Sent)

Who saw this article? New!



MAKE A COMMENT ABOUT THIS ISSUE.

 Make a comment about this issue
ENGOREART POR 20080515
 
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
Usted necesita actualizar su Flash Player
  Related Products
 
Agranco Corp. (United States)
Yuka-Ex
TECHNICAL SUMMARY What is YUKA-EX? Yuka-ex is an animal feed additive in powder form which controls odors, ammoniac and any othe...
 
 
Inserbo S.L. (Spain)
JG-902/905 STARVET VACCINATORS
Our Starvet vaccination syringes are characterised by their high precision, easy dosage system and their comfortable exclusive anatomical injection sy...
 
 
Abbi-Products B.V. (Netherlands)
Fans
Aerotech would like to make an optimum contribution in striving toward the ideal climate, and therefore offers a large range of fans. These can be sup...
 
 
OPTICON Agri Systems (The Netherlands)
MCC-10 POULTRY COMPUTER
Opticon climate controls take care of a healthy and efficient growth of your poultry. The climate in your poultry house will be controlled in conjun...
 
 
Schippers Europe BV - Netherlands (Netherlands)
MS Multiscan
This is a portable handheld scanner with a mechanical 5.0 MHz Sector Probe. The probe has no freeze function. This will lengthen the life of the probe...
 
 
Synbiotics Corporation (United States of America)
Serelisa PCV2 Ag Capture
Kit for the detection of PCV2 (Porcine Circovirus Type 2) antigen in swine faeces or serum. Immunoenzymatic technique...
 
 
Shenzhen Lvshiyuan Biotechnology Co. Ltd. (China)
Animal disease ELISA test kit
Porcine Toxoplasmosis IgG Antibody Test Kit Swine Foot And Mouth Disease IgG Antibody ELISA Test kit Swine Foot and Mouth Disease IgG Distinguishing...
 
 
Polar Genetics Group (Canada)
High Health Production in Swine
Mult-site pig production for improved herd health control....
 
 
Kayola S.L. (Spain)
Pullets Rearing Batteries
Our pullets rearing batteries have the same characteristics and maximum quality as our layers batteries, with the dimensions adapted to their needs. ...
 
 
MLD Veterinary Suppliers (Pakistan)
CASTRATOR BURDEZZO
MLD Veterinary Suppliers is producing CASTRATOR BURDEZZO - as per EUROPEAN STANDARDS....
 
 
DRAMINSKI - Electronics in Agriculture (Poland)
DRAMINSKI SonoFarm
It is a portable ultrasound scanner designated for quick pregnancy detection in small animals. Sonofarm was designed especially for farmers who wa...
 
 
MIK Asia Livestock Equipment Pte Ltd Co (Singapore)
Plastic piggery flooring
Plastic flooring panels 600 x 400mm for piglets and sows....
 
 
Vostermans Ventilation B.V. (Netherlands)
Multifan and EMI fans
Fans for all type of agricultural and industrial applications....
 
 
DNL Farms Ltd. (Canada)
Staff Training Videos
In our videos we go through a step by step process to show the trainee how to do a procedure, use a product or repair a piece of technical equipment. ...
 
 
  Technical Articles
  Treating Swine Manure with Aluminum Chloride
Liquid aluminum chloride can be added to swine manure at most types of production facilities. This may occur in the pit inside the ...

Injection Use and Quality Assured Pork
Giving iron dextran injections to nursing piglets, vaccinations to breeder gilts and sows or growing pigs, and antibiotic injectio ...

Aflatoxin: An Occasional Contaminant of Feed Grains
Aflatoxins are toxic by-products produced by the fungi Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. The Aspergillus fungus can ...

Castration of Pigs
Castration of male livestock intended for meat production is a long standing management practice. In North American swine producti ...

Internal Parasite Control in Pigs
Internal parasites include various types of internal worms that can naturally infect pigs due to oral ingestion of worm eggs from ...

Triticale Grain in Swine Diets
Triticale is a grain developed by crossing durum wheat with rye in order to combine the grain quality, productivity, and disease r ...

Dead Pig Disposal: An Unpleasant but Essential Topic
Even on well managed hog farms, some animals die before being marketed. For example, a 1,200-sow farm that produces 2.2 litters pe ...

Guidelines for feeding mycotoxin-infected corn to swine
The optimum solution is to buy clean grain for swine and feed the contaminated grain to cattle. Feeder cattle should be able to sa ...

Potential Use of Lutalyse to Enhance Libido in Boars with Suppressed Circulating Concentrations of Gonadal Steroids
In the U.S., consolidation and vertical integration of the swine industry has been associated with dramatic changes in breeding he ...

Peat Moss for Piglets at Weaning
Weaning is one of the most stressful times in a pig’s life. Not only does it mean big changes in social, thermal and physical envi ...

See all...

 
 Related Forums
 Substitute of cocoa/coffee as animal feedcarob bean

Chicken-feeded pigs

Brucellosis test

Article: Growing potential for using dried distillers' grains with solubles in swine diets

News: Right particle size reduces swine feed costs

Article: Triticale Grain in Swine Diets

News: Boehringer Ingelheim Hires New Swine Team Members

Article: Disinfection of Swine Barns

Probiotics that works

Hog Feed: coffee beans?

Article: Focus On Feed Conversion

Article: Aflatoxin: An Occasional Contaminant of Feed Grains

No Heat in Weaned Sows, late heat

Homemade Diet

Article: Well-known and new approaches to Biomin® pHD

AREAS
Home | Aquaculture | Mycotoxins | Poultry Industry | Pig Industry | Dairy Cattle | Feed
PIG INDUSTRY
Home | Events | Companies and Products | Home | Forums | Technical Articles | Professionals Guide | News

Copyright © 1999-2008 Engormix.com - All Rights Reserved.