2016
DOI: 10.2527/jas.2016-0472
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Comparison of visual and electronic devices for individual identification of dromedary camels under different farming conditions

Abstract: The camel industry uses traditional (i.e., iron brands and ear tags) and modern (i.e., microchips) identification (ID) systems without having performance results of reference. Previously iron-branded ( = 45; 1 yr) and microchipped ( = 59; 7 yr) camels showed problems of healing (8.6% of brands) and reading (only 42.9% of brands and 69.5% of microchips were readable), which made their use inadvisable. With the aim of proposing suitable ID systems for different farming conditions, an on-field study was performed… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
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“…Injectable transponders and electronic rumen boluses may present a more secure, long-lasting identification method. With some exceptions, these devices allow reliable identification (>98%) in cattle [ 40 ], horses [ 41 ], camels [ 42 ], and goats [ 35 ]. In contrast, the readability of hot-iron brands in cattle is unknown.…”
Section: Alternativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Injectable transponders and electronic rumen boluses may present a more secure, long-lasting identification method. With some exceptions, these devices allow reliable identification (>98%) in cattle [ 40 ], horses [ 41 ], camels [ 42 ], and goats [ 35 ]. In contrast, the readability of hot-iron brands in cattle is unknown.…”
Section: Alternativesmentioning
confidence: 99%