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Foundations of Virtual Fencing: Specifics on Collar Deployment by Company
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Author
Audoin, Flavie
Allen, Brian
Antaya, Andrew
Macon, Lara
Mulliniks, Travis
Publisher
University of Arizona Cooperative Extension
Publication Year
2025
Body

A virtual fence (VF) system typically consists of three main components: (1) a software interface that allows users to draw VF lines and define boundary zones on a digital map, establishing designated grazing areas and exclusion zones; (2) a GPS-enabled collar fitted around an animal’s neck, equipped with technology to track movement and deliver auditory and electrical cues to guide or restrict livestock distribution; and (3) base stations and/or cellular towers that facilitate communication between the software and the collars (Antaya et al., 2024; Ehlert et al., 2024). As of December 2025, 4 VF systems are commercially available in the United States. These trademarked systems include: eShepherd by Gallagher, Halter, Nofence, and Vence by Merck Animal Health. VF components from different manufacturers are typically not compatible or interchangeable. Although there are similarities across systems, each company offers a distinct collar design (Figure 1, Table 1) (Audoin et al., 2025). This educational material provides details on the attachment mechanisms, collar assembly, required deployment tools, and recommendations for achieving proper collar fit for each vendor

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Technical Report
Additional Information
Publication Number: az2175
Collection
  • Articles, citations, reports, websites, and multimedia resources focused on rangeland ecology, management, restoration, and other issues on American rangelands.