Horback K M, Parsons T D
School of Veterinary Medicine,Swine Teaching and Research Center,University of Pennsylvania,382 West Street Road,Kennett Square,PA 19348,USA.
Animal. 2016 Aug;10(8):1351-9. doi: 10.1017/S1751731116000215. Epub 2016 Feb 26.
The movement of sows (Sus scrofa domesticus) out of individual gestation stalls and into group housing can introduce new sources of stress due to the enhanced environmental and social complexity. Some sows may have the behavioral capacity to adapt to these changes better than others. However, little is known about individual differences in behavioral responses, or personality traits, in gestating sows and how they impact the animal's ability to cope with group housing. The temporal consistency in the assessment of an animal's behavior is a prerequisite to the establishment of personality traits and was addressed at an interval of approximately five months during two consecutive gestation periods in the present study. Forty-six group-housed sows from a commercially available genetic line were assessed for aggressive and social behaviors at mixing into a group, reaction to human approach, ease of handling, exploration of an open field, and reaction to a novel object. Principal component analysis revealed the presence of three traits accounting for over 60% of the variance in behaviors: aggressive/dominant, avoidant of humans and active/exploratory. Individual component scores were significantly correlated between pregnancies demonstrating temporal stability of trait assessment. Significant relationships were found between aggressive/dominant component scores and individual feed rank at electronic sow feeding stations and skin lesion scores, as well as between avoidant of humans component scores and average number of stillbirths per litter. These findings provide evidence for the temporal stability of distinct behaviors contributing to personality traits within a group of genetically similar sows and demonstrate how these traits may be useful in identifying individuals likely to succeed in group housing.
将母猪(家猪)从个体妊娠限位栏转移到群体饲养环境中,由于环境和社会复杂性增加,可能会引入新的应激源。一些母猪可能比其他母猪具有更好地适应这些变化的行为能力。然而,对于妊娠母猪行为反应或个性特征的个体差异,以及它们如何影响动物应对群体饲养的能力,人们了解甚少。动物行为评估的时间一致性是确定个性特征的先决条件,本研究在两个连续妊娠期内,以大约五个月的间隔对此进行了研究。对来自一个商业可用遗传品系的46头群体饲养母猪,在混群时的攻击和社交行为、对人类接近的反应、易于处理程度、对空旷场地的探索以及对新物体的反应等方面进行了评估。主成分分析揭示了存在三个特征,它们占行为方差的60%以上:攻击性/主导性、避人以及活跃/探索性。各成分得分在不同孕期之间显著相关,表明特征评估具有时间稳定性。在攻击性/主导性成分得分与电子母猪饲喂站的个体采食排名和皮肤损伤评分之间,以及避人成分得分与每窝死胎平均数量之间,发现了显著关系。这些发现为一组基因相似的母猪中,构成个性特征的不同行为的时间稳定性提供了证据,并证明了这些特征如何有助于识别可能在群体饲养中成功的个体。