Review article
Conditionability of ‘voluntary’ and ‘reflexive-like’ behaviors, with special reference to elimination behavior in cattle

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.05.006Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Indiscriminate excretion by cattle is a source of environmental pollution.

  • No successful toilet training in cattle yet.

  • Various brain centres, the ANS and the SNS are involved in the control of elimination.

  • Toilet training of cattle should be possible using operant conditioning techniques.

Abstract

Typically, cattle urinate and defecate with little or no control over time and place. The resulting excreta contributes to a range of adverse effects on the environment and the animals themselves. These adverse effects could be substantially ameliorated if livestock could be toilet trained. Toilet training requires an animal to suppress impending voiding (a reflexive-like behavior), move to a latrine (voluntary behavior) and reinitiate voiding. Here, we review the neurophysiological processes and learning mechanisms regulating toileting. The suppression and initiation of voiding occur primarily via the coordinated activity of smooth and striated anal and urinary sphincter muscles. The autonomic and somatic nervous systems, along with central processes, regulate these muscles. In several mammalian species, voluntary control of the sphincters has been demonstrated using classical and/or operant conditioning. In this review, we demonstrate that the neurophysiological and behavioral regulation of voiding in cattle is likely to be similarly conditionable. The management of excreta deposition in cattle could have major benefits for reducing livestock greenhouse gas emissions and improving animal health/welfare.

Keywords

Neurophysiological control of elimination
Toilet training
Cattle
Classical conditioning
Operant conditioning

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1

These authors contributed equally to the writing of this manuscript.