Evaluating the Activity of Pigs with Radio-Frequency Identification and Virtual Walking Distances

Animals (Basel). 2023 Oct 6;13(19):3112. doi: 10.3390/ani13193112.

Abstract

Monitoring the activity of animals can help with assessing their health status. We monitored the walking activity of fattening pigs using a UHF-RFID system. Four hundred fattening pigs with UHF-RFID ear tags were recorded by RFID antennas at the troughs, playing devices and drinkers during the fattening period. A minimum walking distance, or virtual walking distance, was determined for each pig per day by calculating the distances between two consecutive reading areas. This automatically calculated value was used as an activity measure and not only showed differences between the pigs but also between different fattening stages. The longer the fattening periods lasted, the less walking activity was detected. The virtual walking distance ranged between 281 m on average in the first fattening stage and about 141 m in the last fattening stage in a restricted environment. The findings are similar to other studies considering walking distances of fattening pigs, but are far less labor-intensive and time-consuming than direct observations.

Keywords: UHF-RFID; activity measure; fattening pigs; walking activity.

Grants and funding

The main author received a scholarship for two years during the study as a doctoral candidate from the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences at the University of Hohenheim.