Tropical and Subtropical Agroecosystems (Mar 2024)

EVALUATION OF THE RELIABILITY AND CONCORDANCE OF VISUAL WEIGHT ASSESSMENT IN WATER BUFFALO FEMALES

  • Jesús Ignacio Vázquez-Bolaina,
  • Rosario E. Salazar-Cuytun,
  • Alvar Alonzo Cruz-Tamayo,
  • Roberto C. Barrientos-Medina,
  • José Carlos Escobar-España,
  • Ricardo A. Garcia-Herrera,
  • Alfonso Juventino Chay-Canul

DOI
https://doi.org/10.56369/tsaes.5194
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 2

Abstract

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Background. For the development of reproductive, nutritional and health programmes, estimation of animal body weight (BW) is a fundamental tool in herd management. Objective. To evaluate of the reliability and concordance of visual weight assessment in water buffalo females. Methodology. Data on visually estimated body weight (VM) and actual body weight (BW) were recorded for 229 female water buffaloes. BW was recorded using a digital scale and visual estimation BW was taken as the average of three observations made by three observers. The measurements obtained by each of the different estimation methods were also compared with the observed weights by inspecting the paired Bland-Altman plots prior to logarithmic transformation. Results. Correlations between observed BW and mean predicted BW for visual methods showed a positive and significant relationship (P<0.001), with an r value of 0.95. According to the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), there was a high degree of reliability in the visual estimates of buffalo weight, due to the similarity in the mean and dispersion of each observer's estimates. Both the Bland-Altman plot and the ICC show that there is a high level of concordance between the buffalo weights obtained by the visual and real methods. Implications. The result of the present study showed that visual assessment highlights the ability of livestock handlers to have a very accurate estimation of BW in female water buffaloes. Conclusion. The results of this study show that visual assessment highlights the ability of livestock handlers to visually estimate BW in female water buffaloes with high reliability and concordance with the animal weighbridge method.

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