Domain: tiger-web1.srvr.media3.us Zebra Cows Repel Flies and Win Ig Nobel Prize | O-T Lounge
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Zebra Cows Repel Flies and Win Ig Nobel Prize

Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:22 am
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
19804 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:22 am


https://www.the-scientist.com/zebra-cows-repel-flies-and-win-ig-nobel-prize-73483

quote:

The 2025 Ig Nobel prize in biology honored Japanese researchers who discovered that black cows painted with vertical white stripes were less desirable to biting flies than their counterparts that didn’t look like zebras.2 This work, led by Tomoki Kojima, a researcher at the Aichi Agricultural Research Center, may offer a more environmentally friendly way (than pesticides) to repel cattle pests. The researchers’ findings also support a leading theory on why zebras evolved stripes, an open question in wildlife research.




quote:

To test this hypothesis, Kojima’s team recruited three black cows (Wagyu cows are often black). They painted one with white stripes, one with black stripes, and left one unpainted. The researchers touched up the painted cows’ stripes every morning for three consecutive days. Kojima's team noted that freehand painting of zebra stripes only took about five minutes per cow.

For 30 minutes twice a day (in the morning and evening), the researchers observed the cows and counted fly-repelling behaviors, such as head throws, leg stamps, and tail flicks. At the end of each observation period, the team took pictures of the cows so they could count the numbers of flies that landed on the cows' bodies and legs.




quote:

Since Kojima’s work came out in 2019, Japanese farmers have put their unusual method to the test. Kojima’s team chose short-lasting paint in their experiment so they could easily switch between treatments on each cow, but the farmers used paint that could last for more than a month.

“I don’t think there are potential health hazards [from paint],” Kojima said, as researchers and farmers commonly paint cattle to be able to identify them from a distance. He added, “[Painting] is a cheap, easy, and animal welfare-friendly method.”

“I was skeptical at first, but I was really surprised that no insects came,” a cattle farmer said in their three-year survey response, reported by the Japanese daily newspaper Asahi Shimbun in 2024. “There was no bullying from other cows, which I was worried about.”
This post was edited on 9/19/25 at 9:36 am
Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
17850 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:23 am to
That's pretty cool!
Posted by NBR_Exile
Houston via Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2012
1925 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:26 am to
Black, white or striped, who cares. Just give me the beef.
Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
17850 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:28 am to
Next question... are the existence of stripes the repelling factor or does the chemical composition of the paint repel the flies?
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
90262 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:29 am to
they carry their penalty flags in their ears?
Posted by upgrayedd
Lifting at Tobin's house
Member since Mar 2013
138458 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:32 am to
Posted by Hangover Haven
Metry
Member since Oct 2013
32586 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:32 am to
They failed to mention the paint has Deet in it….
Posted by SonicAndBareKnuckles
Member since Jun 2018
1908 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:32 am to
quote:

Next question... are the existence of stripes the repelling factor or does the chemical composition of the paint repel the flies?


I've never seen flies going after an open can of paint so...
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
19804 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:37 am to
quote:

Since Kojima’s work came out in 2019, Japanese farmers have put their unusual method to the test. Kojima’s team chose short-lasting paint in their experiment so they could easily switch between treatments on each cow, but the farmers used paint that could last for more than a month.

“I don’t think there are potential health hazards [from paint],” Kojima said, as researchers and farmers commonly paint cattle to be able to identify them from a distance. He added, “[Painting] is a cheap, easy, and animal welfare-friendly method.”

“I was skeptical at first, but I was really surprised that no insects came,” a cattle farmer said in their three-year survey response, reported by the Japanese daily newspaper Asahi Shimbun in 2024. “There was no bullying from other cows, which I was worried about.”


I'd think any fumes would evaporate in a few days
Posted by 777Tiger
Member since Mar 2011
90262 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:38 am to
quote:

animal welfare-friendly method.”


aren't these cows being fattened up for the slaughter?
Posted by SallysHuman
Lady Palmetto Bug
Member since Jan 2025
17850 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:42 am to
quote:

There was no bullying from other cows, which I was worried about.”


Posted by LittleJerrySeinfield
350,000 Post Karma
Member since Aug 2013
10707 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:44 am to
And just like that, LSU fans quit eating beef.
Posted by Zephyrius
Wharton, La.
Member since Dec 2004
9486 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:52 am to
Posted by auggie
Opelika, Alabama
Member since Aug 2013
31239 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:55 am to
Needs some metal flake.
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
134088 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 9:58 am to


COWBRAAAAAAAAA!!!
Posted by WhiskeyThrottle
Weatherford Tx
Member since Nov 2017
7075 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 11:08 am to
I guess the next step is to try to cross breed zebra's and cows?
Posted by Hangit
The Green Swamp
Member since Aug 2014
46072 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 11:33 am to
So, do the cows stand around chewing a weed, spitting, and then asking the new cow what he's in for?

Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
95112 posts
Posted on 9/19/25 at 1:18 pm to
quote:

Zebra Cows


I love the casual racism of the modern O-T.

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