Transfer processes in animal coats. I. Radiative transfer

A silicon cell and a radiometer were used to measure the transmission of short wave (0.4-1 µm) and long wave (3-100 µm) radiation through the coats of sheep and cattle. The reflectivity of the same coats was measured in a spectrophotometer. Measurements of transmission and reflexion were interpreted in terms of a theory of radiation scattering developed (for vegetation) by Cowan (1971), assuming that radiation striking a single hair could be absorbed or scattered either towards or away from the skin. One of the parameters used in the theory is the fraction of radiation intercepted by a ray in unit depth of coat (p). For diffuse radiation the appropriate mean value of the interception function (p̄) is approximately twice the value of p for a ray at normal incidence. The value of p̄ ranged from about 9 cm-1 for sheep’s fleece to 36 cm-1 for calf and deer coats. In the short wave spectrum, mean reflexion coefficients for the whole coat ranged from 0.30 for Welsh Mountain Sheep (black fleece) to 0.79 for Dorset Down Sheep (white fleece); corresponding values of the absorption coefficient for individual hairs were 0.02 and 0.002. On the basis of these and related figures, the absorption of solar radiation by the skin surface was evaluated for different combinations of fleece and skin colour. The combination of a light fleece and a dark skin is a trap for solar radiation because the scattering by hair is predominantly forwards.

[1]  K Cena,et al.  Transfer processes in animal coats. II. Conduction and convection , 1975, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[2]  J. Monteith,et al.  Principles of Environmental Physics , 2014 .

[3]  D. M. Gates,et al.  THERMODYNAMIC EQUILIBRIA OF ANIMALS WITH ENVIRONMENT , 1969 .

[4]  K. Blaxter,et al.  The effect of natural outdoor environments on the energy requirements of sheep. , 1966, Research in Veterinary Science.

[5]  E. Eyal Shorn and unshorn Awassi sheep IV. Skin temperature and changes in temperature and humidity in the fleece and its surface , 1963, The Journal of Agricultural Science.

[6]  T. Dawson,et al.  A comparison of the insulative and reflective properties of the fur of desert kangaroos , 1970 .

[7]  R. Stewart Absorption of solar radiation by the hair of cattle. , 1953 .

[8]  J. A. Clark,et al.  Thermal radiation from animal coats: coat structure and measurements of radiative temperature. , 1973, Physics in medicine and biology.

[9]  Light in Plant Stands with Horizontal Foliage , 1971 .

[10]  J. Hutchinson,et al.  Penetrance of cattle coats by radiation. , 1969, Journal of applied physiology.

[11]  I. R. Cowan The Interception and Absorption of Radiation in Plant Stands , 1968 .

[12]  J. Monteith,et al.  Transfer processes in animal coats. III. Water vapour diffusion , 1975, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[13]  M. Kovarik Flow of Heat in An Irradiated Protective Cover , 1964, Nature.