BEHAVIOR


COLLECTION: GOAT HANDBOOK
ORIGIN: United States
DATE INCLUDED: June 1992

Extension Goat Handbook

This material was contributed from collections at the National Agricultural
Library.  However, users should direct all inquires about the contents to
authors or originating agencies.


DOCN 000000053
NO   F-10
TI   BEHAVIOR
AU   G. F. W. Haenlein
          R. Caccese; U. of Delaware, Newark
RV   P. H. Sammelwitz; U. of Delaware, Newark
DE   Anatomy and Physiology

Text
1        The study of goat behavior, like so many aspects  of the recorded
     knowledge of the genus Capra, is  sketchy at best. Many inferences to
     the behavioral  patterns of goats have been drawn from the more
     abundant and detailed information available on  the closely related
     genera of sheep, deer and  antelopes. While many behavioral
     characteristics  of these genera are indeed similiar, it is important
     to realize that several basic behavioral differences  occur. It is these
     unique aspects of goat behavior  that must be understood by the goatsman
     so that  his management system is not at odds with the  natural ways of
     the herd. An understanding of the  caprine way is sure to present a
     twofold benefit to  the goatsman. First, it will enable him to provide a
     more thorough and efficient management system,  thereby deriving an
     economic benefit. Secondly,  and perhaps more importantly, a greater
     knowledge of goat behavior will help cultivate an  enhanced appreciation
     and enjoyment for the  species.

2        Nine basic behavioral systems are generally  recognized but the two
     most interesting in regards  to goats are their ingestive and
     allelomimetic  behavior. Sexual, agonistic, epimeletic (care-giving) and
     etepimeletic (care-seeking) behavior,  while also important, are
     predominantly of a  seasonal nature. A real significance to the specific
     eliminative behavior of the goat has not been  described sufficiently.

3    Basic Behavior Systems: Ingestive Behavior
         Grazing -- Goats are differentiated from most  other domestic
     ruminants by the fact they are  browsers as opposed to being grazers.
     Under  natural conditions, goats are not the great  destroyers of
     vegetation that they are often indicated to be, as they will range over
     a large area,  grazing and browsing selectively. Under confined
     conditions however, goats will become heavy  browsers of trees and
     shrubs, and less  discriminating in their grazing habits, due to the
     reduced supply of available herbage.

4        Goats exhibit a definite preference for a varied  diet, often
     consuming no less than 25 different  plant species. This penchant for
     variety serves the  goat well, for many of the ''weed'' species that are
     so eagerly consumed by goats have a higher  mineral and protein content
     than grasses, owing to  the greater root depth of the weeds. This
     grazing  behavior can also work as a bonus for the livestock  manager,
     as goats can graze quite productively on  land that has been grazed over
     by cattle and other  livestock, thus providing the manager with extra
     income from inter-species grazing of an otherwise  ''depleted'' field.
     It also may help to explain why  goats are less likely to bloat than
     almost any other  ruminant. They will not overgraze succulent  legumes.
     They do provide roughage for normal  rumen activity through browsing of
     pasture  grasses and brushes.

5        In an unconfined grazing system, goats will  almost uniformly reject
     any plants contaminated  with the scent of their own species' urine or
     feces.  From an evolutionary standpoint, this is significant in that it
     limits parasite infestation. However,  in confined, highly contaminated
     areas goats may  be forced to consume such plant material with the
     obvious bad consequences.

6        Grazing intake is related to the metabolic rate  and body size of
     the goat, varying with the breed  and age of the animal. The species and
     stage of  growth of the plants being eaten also have an effect on the
     amount of herbage intake. Feed intake  of goats fluctuates in accordance
     with environmental temperature, and appetite is subject to a
     thermoregulatory brain control. The amount of time  spent eating and the
     rate of mastication both tend  to increase as the temperature goes down.
     However, once the surrounding temperature drops  below 10C (50F), eating
     activity decreases again.  There is a correlation between lower
     temperatures  and reduced water intake, and restriction in the  amount
     of water consumed will cause reduction in  dry matter consumption. The
     digestibility of dry  matter may actually be increased especially the
     digestibility of the crude fiber portion of feeds.

7        Goats are known to be able to distinguish be  tween bitter, salt,
     sweet and sour tastes. The fact  that they have a higher tolerance for
     bitter tasting  feeds than most other ruminants can be attributed  to
     the browsing propensity for bark, leaves,  shoots, shrubs and branches
     which may have a  more bitter taste than grasses, forbs and general
     pasture. Goats also have a well developed ability to  discriminate
     sweets. Although proper amounts of  salt are very important, amounts of
     more than 5  gm/100 cc are generally refused.

8        Goats tend to spend more time eating each day  than other ruminants,
     often eating for as long as  11 hours. This may be misleading though,
     for they  spend more time and distance moving from one  plant to another
     than sheep or cattle.

9        The length and regularity of rumination is inversely related to the
     alert state of the goat, with  long regular periods of rumination
     occurring during a semi-somnolent state. If subjected to random  noises,
     rumination may become irregular. Fully  aroused goats will generally not
     ruminate.

10       Water Intake -- Goats are well adapted to  limited water intake and
     short term shortages, as  their water turnover rate is only 188 cc/kg/24
     hrs.  This compares to a rate of 185 cc/kg/24 hrs for the  camel, an
     animal that is known for its ability to go  without water for long
     periods of time. Rates in  comparison for sheep and cattle are 197
     cc/kg/24  hrs and 347 cc/kg/24 hrs, respectively.

11       During some seasons when sweating or  respiratory cooling is not
     necessary for the  maintenance of body temperature, goats can often
     sustain an adequate intake of water from their  grazed feeds alone, if
     it has a moisture content of  600r more.

12       During environmental temperatures of about  38C (100.4 F), the
     panting rate (respiratory cooling) of goats is only about half that of
     sheep. Their  sweating is limited, and the loss of water through  feces
     and urine is much reduced. Reduced water intake over a period of several
     days will result in a  corresponding decrease in the excretion of urine,
     with the concentration of urea being increased.

13       Water intake will be much greater for lactating  goats, since milk
     is approximately 85water. The  greater the production of the goat, the
     more water  will be required. A goat producing 8 lbs of milk per  day
     will require more than an equal amount of  water merely for milk
     production.

14       Suckling Kids -- Within a short time after birth,  the kid will
     begin a tentative search of the doe's  body, trying to suck at numerous
     locations along  the doe that can be grasped in the kid's mouth.  Often,
     nursing will be attempted between the doe's  front legs. Eventually, the
     nipples are found and true nursing begins. After the first day or two, a
     normal kid will have no difficulty in promptly  locating a teat when
     hungry. While nursing, the  kid may often be observed  to ''butt'' at
     the doe's  udder, which serves to facilitate milk letdown, thus
     increasing the amount of milk available to the kid.  The sucking reflex
     of the kids enables them to be  easily transferred to a ''lambar'' or
     bottle, allowing  the doe to return to the milking herd soon after the
     kids have received an adequate intake of  colostrum.

15   Eliminative Behavior
         There appears to have been little evolutionary importance in the
     development of specific eliminative  behavior among goats. There is no
     evidence, of any  form of territorial marking by urination or
     defecation, as is common to many other animals.  However, bucks can
     determine if a doe is in estrus  by sniffing her urine. Elimination
     occurs at random  in the field, with goats avoiding areas of defecation
     or urination while grazing. This avoidance behavior  is depressed in
     confinement management and  widespread contamination occurs.

16       When urinating, the doe goes into a squat position similar to the
     one assumed by a female dog.  Even buck kids will arch their back and
     bend their  legs while urinating. This behavior is not displayed  in
     adult bucks. All goats wag their tails back and  forth while defecating,
     although the significance of  this act, if any, is not known.

17   Sexual Behavior
         Sexual behavior among most goats at least those  derived from the
     temperate zones is seasonally  dependent, with the females lacking an
     estrus  period during the late spring and summer months.  The libido, or
     sex drive, of the buck is also at a low  ebb during this time, but semen
     volume is lowest  already in early spring and motility is poorest in
     the winter. The volume and motility of semen is  greatest during the
     late summer and fall. The  return to normal sexual behavior is first
     achieved  by the buck, generally about 2 weeks before does  return to
     estrus. It is thought that the courting of  the buck may accelerate the
     onset of the breeding  season. The length of the breeding season is
     influenced by such factors as day length,  temperature, and geographic
     origin. Those breeds  that originate from high, mountainous areas have
     an abbreviated breeding season. All goats have a  peak estrus cycle in
     the fall of the year, thus allowing for most kids to be born during the
     favorable  spring time.

18       The doe is usually on a 21-day cycle during the  breeding seasons.
     This cycle is somewhat variable  among individuals, as is the duration
     of estrus, or  standing heat. This period generally lasts 18 to 24  hrs,
     although it may even last considerably longer.  At the beginning and end
     of each breeding season,  the doe may go through a ''silent'' estrus in
     which  ovulation is not accompanied by normal estrus  behavior. In other
     species, this has been attributed  to a lack of circulating levels of
     estrogens at the  time of estrus.

19       The ''goat odor'' of bucks is of significance in sexual behavior in
     that it serves as a stimulus to the  doe. Through conditioning and
     previous sexual experience, the odor elicits a series of responses in
     the  female that serve to facilitate the courting and  breeding process.
     The doe will rub her neck and  body against the buck, and will stand to
     receive his  attentions.

20       Behavioral patterns of the buck are more unique  and complex among
     the two sexes during the  breeding season. He becomes aggressive as he
     struggles to attain and maintain the position of  lead (alpha) buck. He
     is more active and verbal  during the breeding season, constantly on the
     lookout for does in estrus and invading bucks. He  will often be
     sniffing the urine of does, extend the  head and neck into the air with
     the upper lip curled  up (the ''Flehmen'' posture), searching for the
     olfactory and gustatory stimuli that indicate to him  that the doe is in
     estrus.

21       Upon identifying a doe in estrus, the buck will  follow her, and
     then move up in an attempt to herd  the doe away from the rest of the
     flock. Once  separated the buck will begin to paw the ground  around the
     doe in an apparent display of masculinity. During these and subsequent
     stages of  precopulatory behavior, the buck emits a frequent  hoarse,
     ''baaing'' that is often termed a ''grumble''.  The buck can also be
     observed to run his tongue in  and out of his mouth during these first
     two stages  and is generally very excited. Next he proceeds to  sniff
     and nuzzle the genital areas of the doe, while  intermittently rubbing
     against the side of the doe.

22       Copulation is achieved by the buck mounting  and gaining
     intromission through repeated  thrusting movements of the hind quarters.
     If the  doe is fully receptive and experienced, she will  stand
     completely still to receive the male. If she is  not fully receptive or
     lacks previous sexual experience, she may move about or even begin to
     walk away, thus making if more difficult for the  buck to gain
     intromision. This creates a greater expenditure of both time and energy
     on the buck's  part, and if many does behave in this fashion, it  may
     cause problems in getting the flock covered by  the buck.

23   Epimeletic Behavior (care-giving maternal)
         The doe will separate from the rest of the flock  when kidding time
     approaches. After the kid is  born, she will lick the youngster clean of
     any afterbirth and may even eat the afterbirth. The licking  of the kid
     has a general stimulatory effect on it,  and if necessary may be done
     also by the manager  in the form of a brisk rubbing with a clean dry
     cloth or wad of straw. The doe may give a parturient call, consisting of
     a short, low pitched  bleating either to her young or in response to the
     call of any kid. If a strange kid should approach  her, however, she
     will rebuke it.

24       Constant contact between the doe and the kid,  with much sniffing
     and licking on the doe's part, is  necessary for the formation of an
     early close bond  and imprinting. If a kid is removed at birth from  its
     mother and returned before 2 hours have elapsed, the doe will accept the
     kid; later, it may be rejected; certainly after 3 hours. Acceptance of a
     kid  can be achieved through forced exposure if the doe  is restrained,
     tranquilized or fooled by washing the  kid with the doe's scent. This
     procedure is difficult  and time consuming, and may take as long as 10
     days before acceptance is complete. In a flock  situation, subordinate
     does may allow any kid to  nurse after a brief bonding period of about
     10  minutes. Bonding in goats is primarily based on  olfactory cues.

25   Et-epimeletic Behavior (care-seeking)
         Young kids, if captured, held, or hurt will emit a  high pitched
     general distress call, which is capable  of conveying emotional
     distress. Even the most  novice goatsman has no trouble recognizing it
     as a  distress call.

26       Adults will also ''baa'' rather stridently when  separated from the
     rest of the flock. This accounts  for the fact that when several herds
     are mixed,  there is usually a great deal of noise as the goats  mill
     about, trying to locate their herd members.

27   Agonistic Behavior (antagonistic)
         Bucks engage in a form of rearing and butting in  order to establish
     dominance for the formation of a  flock hierarchy. While animals such as
     sheep approach each other and butt head on, goats stand  about 4 to 6
     feet apart, then rear up so that their  body is at right angles to their
     opponent, with their  head turned and facing toward the opponent. They
     then pivot and lunge forward and down to the  ground, coming together in
     a sharp crack. This  difference between sheep and goat behavior  enables
     the two to be kept together with little conflict between them.

28       The establishment of a social hierarchy among  the bucks results in
     the selection of the dominant  (alpha) buck, who is responsible for
     flock safety  and the breeding of the does. The other bucks in  the
     flock, because they do not breed, are peripheral  males or ''social
     castrates''. If the buck is not fertile  or of low fertility, then the
     flock kidding rate will  be low, even though several fertile bucks may
     be  available.

29       The dominant buck is aggresive during the  breeding season, but
     during the rest of the year he  is content even to be pushed around by
     the leading  female (queen). This queen is the true leader of the
     flock, and usually achieves her rank by virtue of  having the most
     descendants. The dominance of  the mother over her young is maintained
     throughout life.

30       It appears that dominance may be established  by such factors as
     relative age, play fighting and  whether or not the goat is horned. A
     horned female  may be dominant over a hornless male.

31       The development of dominance is enhanced by  crowding and the use of
     small feeding areas, as the  increased competition for the same food and
     space  exerts an organizational pressure. Once a  dominance order is
     established however, it may remain stable for several years even though
     the  organization of the flock itself changes as individuals are born,
     die or mature. Newcomers to  the herd have to find their own level and
     establish  themselves in the flock order, with the result of increased
     fighting for a short period of time. Any  fighting is always on a one to
     one basis; there is  never a gang attack on a goat, although one after
     another may fight against the same goat.

32       When alarmed, goats will stomp one forefoot and  produce a high
     pitched, sneezing sound. Goat  flocks exhibit a tendency to move about a
     short  distance away, forming a thin line in front of the  disturbance.
     If pursued further, they will tend to  break up from the group. This
     prevents them from  being herded like sheep, which tend to bunch
     together while being pursued. This is one reason  shy dogs have never
     worked well in goat herding  attempts.

33       Young kids, instead of following their mother  while she grazes,
     remain in one spot, ''freezing'' at  the sign of any danger. By
     freezing, a predator (if that is the danger), may pass the kid without
     locating it.

34       Adult goats are also occasionally known to go into a catatonic state
     when scared or threatened.  This response, which is similar to the
     opossum,  was first recorded by Ivan Petrovich Pavlov, the  Russian
     scientist who pioneered the classical conditioning experiments with
     dogs. He felt that goat  response was related to some inhibition of the
     goat's normal self-protective impulse to run.

35       This unique response was studied again in 1961  at Cornell and Duke
     Universities, and the Institute  of Muscle Research at the Marine
     Biology  Laboratory at Woods Hole, Massachusetts.  It was noticed that
     the catatonic sym   ++++MISSING DATA++++

36   Shelter Seeking Behavior
         Goats are generally quite hardy animals, being  able to weather the
     heat and the cold comparatively well, so long as they are provided with
     a well  constructed shed. If there's one thing a goat  doesn't like,
     it's rain. Goats will run to the nearest  available shelter on the
     approach of a storm, often  arriving before the first drops of rain have
     fallen.  They also have an intense dislike for water puddles  and mud.
     Probably through evolution they have  been more free of parasites if
     they have avoided  wet spots. Goat management should copy this.

37       While hot weather poses no great problem to  most goats, high level
     of humidity does cause them  stress. This will lower milk production,
     cause loss  of body weight and even may increase hostility  within a
     flock.

38       An interesting adaptation of shelter seeking  behavior occurs among
     goats that are living in hot,  dry and treeless areas. They have been
     observed to  congregate and huddle during the midday heat,  when it
     seems preferable to be apart from one  another. This crowding occurs
     when the rate of  heat taken in by the goat's body is in excess of its
     ability to dissipate heat. By crowding, the goats  manage to reduce the
     intake of direct and reflected solar energy.  The lack of suitable covers
     or shade  during the midday sun (when cast shadows are at a minimum),
     has resulted in   ++++MISSING DATA++++
VIDF 155





תתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתThe National Dairy Database (1992)תתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתת
תתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתת\NDB\GOAT\TEXT2\F10תתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתתת


%f TITLE;BEHAVIOR
%f COLLECTION;GOAT HANDBOOK
%f ORIGIN;United States
%f DATE_INCLUDED;June 1992