RFID for Livestock Management

Animal ID, Traceability, and Herd Health

Using RFID for livestock identification, movement traceability, and health monitoring across beef, dairy, and poultry operations.

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RFID for Livestock Management: Animal ID, Traceability, and Herd Health

Livestock RFID operates at LF (134.2 kHz, ISO 11784/11785) rather than UHF because LF penetrates wet tissue reliably — the animal's body is mostly water. A 134.2 kHz tag implanted subcutaneously or placed in a bolus inside the rumen continues transmitting its 64-bit ID through centimetres of tissue, even when the animal is wet or muddy.

Tag Types and Placement

Tag Type Placement Species Read Range Standard
Ear tag (button) Left ear, mid-position Cattle, sheep, goats 0–60 cm ISO 11784
Injectable transponder Subcutaneous (neck/ear base) Horses, pigs, small ruminants 0–20 cm ISO 11784
Rumen bolus Reticulo-rumen (swallowed) Cattle, sheep 0–60 cm ISO 11784
Leg band Above hock (poultry) Poultry 0–10 cm ISO 11784
Implantable chip (15-digit) Sub-dermis Horses, companion animals 0–15 cm ISO 11784/85

LF ear tags are the dominant choice for cattle and small ruminants in regulated markets. The transponder inside the button tag is hermetically sealed and survives the animal's lifetime.

ISO 11784/11785 Identifiers

Each compliant tag broadcasts a 64-bit code. The structure is defined in ISO 11784:

  • Bits 1–16: Flags (animal flag, country code indicator)
  • Bits 17–26: Country or manufacturer code (3-digit country code per ISO 3166)
  • Bits 27–64: National identification number (12-digit decimal)

The resulting 15-digit national ID is the basis for government traceability databases — NLIS (Australia), CTS (UK), USDA ID (United States), EID France, and others.

For performance animals (racehorses) and companion animals, the same ISO 11784 format is used but the country code field carries a manufacturer prefix. The EPC framework is not used in livestock — the ISO 11784 ID is the universal standard.

Reader Hardware for Livestock

Reader Type Use Case Form Factor
Panel reader Race/drafting alley, loading ramp Fixed frame, 60–80 cm read range
Stick reader Individual animal ID in field Wand, 10–40 cm
Portable data recorder Pregnancy check, weigh-in Handheld + display
Weigh-scale integration Automatic weight + ID at chute Built into weigh head
Automatic drafting gate Sort by weight, pregnancy, EID group Fixed, high throughput

Alley-based panel readers at drafting and weigh stations are the highest-value fixed infrastructure. A cattle station reading 3,000 head through a single drafting alley can automatically:

  1. Read each animal's EID as it passes.
  2. Look up its current weight target and treatment schedule.
  3. Actuate a pneumatic gate to divert the animal to the correct pen.
  4. Record the reading event with timestamp and GPS location.

Regulatory Requirements

In most markets, RFID tagging of cattle and sheep is compulsory. Key regulations:

Region Regulation Tag Requirement
European Union EU Reg 2016/429 Dual-tag (EID + visual) for cattle and sheep
United Kingdom BCMS / ARAMS EID mandatory for cattle from 2014, sheep from 2023
Australia NLIS NLIS EID ear tag for all cattle at birth
United States USDA 840 840 EID for interstate movement of cattle (AIN rule)
New Zealand NAIT NAIT EID tag for all cattle and deer

Non-compliance penalties include fines, animal movement restrictions, and loss of export certification.

Herd Health and Breeding Records

Beyond identification, EID enables automated herd management:

  • Heat detection: Accelerometer tags or pedometers log activity; a spike in movement correlates with estrus. RFID reader at the water trough cross-references activity data with individual animal records.
  • Weighing: Auto-draft scales capture weight and EID simultaneously, calculating average daily gain per animal without manual data entry.
  • Vaccination and treatment: Handheld reader scans the animal; software displays the treatment protocol and records the dose, product batch, and withdrawal date.
  • Calving records: Dam EID, sire (AI straw barcode), birth date, and calf EID captured at tagging to build parentage pedigrees.

System Integration

Farm management software (Gallagher, Datamars, FarmWorks, Herdwatch) accepts reads from ISO 11784-compliant readers via Bluetooth or USB. Regulatory reporting (birth registrations, movement notifications, health event reports) is submitted to national databases via API — NLIS DataLink in Australia, CTS web services in the UK.

Emerging Applications: Smart Ear Tags

The latest generation of livestock ear tags combines the ISO 11784 passive LF transponder with active sensors:

  • GPS/GNSS location: Tag records GPS coordinates every 30 minutes; transmits via LoRaWAN or NB-IoT when the animal is near a base station.
  • Accelerometer/activity sensor: Detects rumination, walking, lying — health indicators for early disease detection.
  • Temperature sensor: Core body temperature trending; alert if fever threshold exceeded.

These smart tags are more expensive ($15–$50 vs. $1–$3 for a passive tag) but are cost-effective for high-value animals (stud bulls, performance horses, breeding sows) where early disease detection has large economic impact.

The LF transponder inside the smart tag remains ISO 11784-compliant, so it integrates with the same readers and national databases used for standard EID management.

Tag Failure and Replacement

Ear tag loss rates of 1–5 % per year are normal in cattle and small ruminants (tags snagged on fencing, lost during fighting, rejected by ear tissue). When a tag is lost:

  1. Identify the animal by cross-referencing visual tags, brand, or body markings.
  2. Issue a replacement tag with the same national ID number (country regulations specify the replacement procedure and timeframe).
  3. Update the national database with the replacement tag number and loss event date.
  4. Record the replacement in the farm management system linked to the animal's existing health history.

Failure to report lost tags and apply replacements within the regulatory timeframe is a common compliance violation during herd inspections.

See also: RFID Frequency Bands Explained, Passive vs Active RFID Tags, RFID in Regulated Industries.

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Our guides cover a range of experience levels. Getting Started guides introduce RFID fundamentals. Implementation guides help engineers design RFID solutions for specific industries. Advanced guides cover topics like dense reader mode, anti-collision algorithms, and EPC encoding schemes.

Most getting-started guides require only a basic UHF RFID reader (such as the Impinj Speedway or ThingMagic M6e) and a few sample tags. Some guides reference desktop USB readers for development. All hardware requirements are listed at the beginning of each guide.