Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Cattle herding from space

In 2001 and 2002 I had a brief opportunity to collaborate with the Dean Anderson at the USDA ARS Jornada Research Station near Las Cruces, New Mexico, on a project the tracked cattle with solar-powered satellite collars which could send low voltage “buzzes” to cattle and direct where they grazed. This research allowed the Jornada Station (over 28,000 acres) to remove most of the internal fences and control cow movement, bunching at breeding and avoidance of poisonous plants by checking and sending signals to the cattle via a satellite. At that time the system could check on the exact location of each collared cow on five minute intervals. As the development cost on the collars shrunk from over $1,100 down to about $18 per cow the project became more feasible. Ranchers working with the project on adjacent lands found they could control which bull-cow matches were together, where grazing was done and generally control the movement of the animals. I had Dean make a presentation to the Colorado Section of the Society for Range Management in 2002 while I served as its President. A rancher that came up with Dean to the meeting indicated he could cut “days off of his gathering time by electronically hazing cows towards the corrals in advance.” But recently the project has evolved in response to both cowboy tradition and pressure not to use even non-injurious shocks from the collars as stimuli...read more

Soon to be a Forest Service requirement, I'm sure.

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