Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?

Just like everywhere else, dairy farming in the French Jura is undergoing profound changes. Herd size is increasing as is the adoption of promising technologies. We have been monitoring these changes through a broad qualitative survey since 2014 and have become intrigued by the close relationships t...

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Main Authors: Catherine Mougenot, Sandrine Petit, Claire Gaillard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Recherche et Pratique sur les Activités 2020-10-01
Series:Activités
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/activites/5693
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spelling doaj-4c92492f0b234c36acba427afcc04d2a2021-09-02T17:50:19ZengAssociation Recherche et Pratique sur les ActivitésActivités1765-27232020-10-0117210.4000/activites.5693Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?Catherine MougenotSandrine PetitClaire GaillardJust like everywhere else, dairy farming in the French Jura is undergoing profound changes. Herd size is increasing as is the adoption of promising technologies. We have been monitoring these changes through a broad qualitative survey since 2014 and have become intrigued by the close relationships that dairy farmers maintain with their cows as well as by the visual skills they employ to manage their herds. We have attempted to grasp the extent of this visual ability from three angles. The skill is put into practice for animal care and in all key dairy farming activities. This visual ability combines numerous indices both in the present moment and over time, all of which help to build precise knowledge. Yet this “knowing how to see” is not only developed on farms, it is also shared with other actors in communities built around the Montbéliarde breed, showcased in livestock competitions and fairs: “to see” is also “to show”. The visual know-how of the farmer coexists with the data from the sensors placed on the animals, thus raising a key issue: is this skill under threat from the new technologies promoted by precision breeding?http://journals.openedition.org/activites/5693dairy farmingknow-howexpert eyeprecision FarmingMontbéliarde cattle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Mougenot
Sandrine Petit
Claire Gaillard
spellingShingle Catherine Mougenot
Sandrine Petit
Claire Gaillard
Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
Activités
dairy farming
know-how
expert eye
precision Farming
Montbéliarde cattle
author_facet Catherine Mougenot
Sandrine Petit
Claire Gaillard
author_sort Catherine Mougenot
title Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
title_short Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
title_full Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
title_fullStr Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
title_full_unstemmed Le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
title_sort le « coup d’œil » de l’éleveur est-il menacé par l’élevage de précision ?
publisher Association Recherche et Pratique sur les Activités
series Activités
issn 1765-2723
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Just like everywhere else, dairy farming in the French Jura is undergoing profound changes. Herd size is increasing as is the adoption of promising technologies. We have been monitoring these changes through a broad qualitative survey since 2014 and have become intrigued by the close relationships that dairy farmers maintain with their cows as well as by the visual skills they employ to manage their herds. We have attempted to grasp the extent of this visual ability from three angles. The skill is put into practice for animal care and in all key dairy farming activities. This visual ability combines numerous indices both in the present moment and over time, all of which help to build precise knowledge. Yet this “knowing how to see” is not only developed on farms, it is also shared with other actors in communities built around the Montbéliarde breed, showcased in livestock competitions and fairs: “to see” is also “to show”. The visual know-how of the farmer coexists with the data from the sensors placed on the animals, thus raising a key issue: is this skill under threat from the new technologies promoted by precision breeding?
topic dairy farming
know-how
expert eye
precision Farming
Montbéliarde cattle
url http://journals.openedition.org/activites/5693
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