Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?

With the advancing digital transformation in society as a whole and in agriculture in particular the use of digital animal monitoring in livestock farming is steadily increasing. Since the introduction of the first automatic systems in the 1980s many monitoring approaches have been developed. Howev...

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Main Authors: Christina Umstätter, Daniel Martini, Felix Adrion
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Kuratorium für Technik und Bauwesen in der Landwirtschaft e. V. 2020-01-01
Series:Landtechnik
Online Access:https://www.landtechnik-online.eu/landtechnik/article/view/3227
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spelling doaj-4b327669081c4468b48ab29a29f0fd672021-04-02T13:04:47ZdeuKuratorium für Technik und Bauwesen in der Landwirtschaft e. V.Landtechnik0023-80822700-78982020-01-0175110.15150/lt.2020.32273227Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?Christina UmstätterDaniel MartiniFelix Adrion With the advancing digital transformation in society as a whole and in agriculture in particular the use of digital animal monitoring in livestock farming is steadily increasing. Since the introduction of the first automatic systems in the 1980s many monitoring approaches have been developed. However, adoption and diffusion of the systems varies, and uptake is often slow. Of course, all new developments bear challenges, risks and opportunities. We herein summarise the expected future prospects and developments as perceived by stakeholders by using discussions in focus groups to collect the information. Therefore, a stakeholder workshop on the topic of animal monitoring and digital transformation in livestock farming was held in November 2017 in Kassel, Germany, with 30 invited participants from a range of stakeholder groups. We identified four key messages: 1. Health and welfare of livestock can be improved by optimised process control using objective real-time data without replacing human judgement; 2. disruptive processes can result in new farming models and markets; 3. different personalities and highly qualified workers might enter the agricultural businesses, and 4. small farms could profit from digital transformation. Our findings highlight the importance of providing possibilities and reducing barriers for agricultural development so that disruptive technologies and new people and ideas have a chance to grow sustainably. Policymakers need to develop suitable regulations for data security and protection to safeguard a fair workplace and market for the involved stakeholders. https://www.landtechnik-online.eu/landtechnik/article/view/3227
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christina Umstätter
Daniel Martini
Felix Adrion
spellingShingle Christina Umstätter
Daniel Martini
Felix Adrion
Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
Landtechnik
author_facet Christina Umstätter
Daniel Martini
Felix Adrion
author_sort Christina Umstätter
title Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
title_short Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
title_full Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
title_fullStr Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
title_full_unstemmed Opinion Paper: Digital Animal Monitoring – What is on the Horizon?
title_sort opinion paper: digital animal monitoring – what is on the horizon?
publisher Kuratorium für Technik und Bauwesen in der Landwirtschaft e. V.
series Landtechnik
issn 0023-8082
2700-7898
publishDate 2020-01-01
description With the advancing digital transformation in society as a whole and in agriculture in particular the use of digital animal monitoring in livestock farming is steadily increasing. Since the introduction of the first automatic systems in the 1980s many monitoring approaches have been developed. However, adoption and diffusion of the systems varies, and uptake is often slow. Of course, all new developments bear challenges, risks and opportunities. We herein summarise the expected future prospects and developments as perceived by stakeholders by using discussions in focus groups to collect the information. Therefore, a stakeholder workshop on the topic of animal monitoring and digital transformation in livestock farming was held in November 2017 in Kassel, Germany, with 30 invited participants from a range of stakeholder groups. We identified four key messages: 1. Health and welfare of livestock can be improved by optimised process control using objective real-time data without replacing human judgement; 2. disruptive processes can result in new farming models and markets; 3. different personalities and highly qualified workers might enter the agricultural businesses, and 4. small farms could profit from digital transformation. Our findings highlight the importance of providing possibilities and reducing barriers for agricultural development so that disruptive technologies and new people and ideas have a chance to grow sustainably. Policymakers need to develop suitable regulations for data security and protection to safeguard a fair workplace and market for the involved stakeholders.
url https://www.landtechnik-online.eu/landtechnik/article/view/3227
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