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Abstract: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is at the forefront of a digital revolution in livestock farming, enabling enhanced decision-making, automation, and predictive capabilities across the dairy production system. Techniques such as supervised learning, deep learning, and ensemble methods integrate diverse data sources, including wearable sensor inputs, environmental metrics, and genetic information, to support early disease detection, reproductive monitoring, and behavioral assessment. These innovations, central to Precision Livestock Farming (PLF), offer promising pathways to optimize productivity, improve animal welfare, and reduce the environmental footprint of animal agriculture. AI-driven tools such as facial recognition, computer vision, and Internet of Things (IoT) enabled devices facilitate non-invasive, real-time monitoring, supporting individualized care and proactive management. In dairy systems, the integration of PLF with Industry 4.0 frameworks, coined “Dairy 4.0,” enables smart milking, automated feeding, and continuous health surveillance. However, the adoption of ML and PLF technologies remains uneven, constrained by high implementation costs, inadequate digital infrastructure, limited farmer training, and ethical concerns around data privacy and reduced human-animal interaction. Interoperability issues, poor sensor durability, and lack of standardization further hinder scalability, particularly in smallholder and developing contexts. Overcoming these challenges will require interdisciplinary collaboration, inclusive design, regulatory innovation, and targeted investments in digital infrastructure and farmer capacity-building. When thoughtfully implemented, ML and PLF technologies have the potential to transform livestock farming into a more efficient, ethical, and sustainable enterprise. By aligning technological innovation with the needs of diverse farming systems and ensuring equitable access, the livestock industry can move toward a future defined by resilience, transparency, and data-driven animal care.
Published in: Turkish Journal of Veterinary Research
Volume 10, Issue 1, pp. 67-81