School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle, United Kingdom.
Animal Behaviour & Welfare, Animal and Veterinary Sciences Research Group, Scotland's Rural College (SRUC), Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2021 May 5;16(5):e0250556. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250556. eCollection 2021.
Animal welfare scientists have accumulated knowledge and developed interventions to improve livestock welfare, but these are poorly adopted in commercial practice. Animal welfare interventions are rarely tested for economic viability and this limits their uptake. This study employs Stochastic Partial Budgeting (SPB) to determine the viability of animal welfare improvements. Aggression between pigs is used as an example because there is a large literature base from which to draw interventions, and the problem has persisted for decades without resolution. Costs and benefits of three interventions to control aggression (pre-weaning socialisation, synthetic maternal pheromones and large social groups) were estimated by reviewing the academic and industry literature and by conducting a survey of sixteen pig farmers. The net effects were compared to farmers' willingness to pay (WTP) for interventions to reduce aggression as identified by recent research. Results are consistent with prior research which indicates that improving animal welfare generally comes at a cost to producers. Nevertheless, pre-weaning socialisation resulted in a neutral or positive net effect 38% of the time and should be central to campaigns promoting the control of aggression in the industry. Exposing pigs to synthetic maternal pheromones did not improve profitability but the net costs were small and within the realms of WTP for a sub-group of farmers with animal welfare goals. The net costs of converting existing buildings in order to house pigs in large social groups were beyond the realms of farmers' WTP. The approach adopted in this study, of combining SPB with WTP from the sector, should be extended to other animal welfare issues.
动物福利科学家已经积累了知识并开发了干预措施来改善牲畜福利,但这些措施在商业实践中应用不佳。动物福利干预措施很少被测试其经济可行性,这限制了它们的采用。本研究采用随机部分预算(SPB)来确定动物福利改善的可行性。之所以选择猪的攻击行为作为示例,是因为有大量文献可以从中提取干预措施,并且这个问题已经存在了几十年,没有得到解决。通过审查学术和行业文献以及对 16 位养猪户进行调查,估算了三种控制攻击行为的干预措施(断奶前社会化、合成母体信息素和大群体饲养)的成本和收益。净效应与最近研究确定的农民减少攻击行为的意愿支付(WTP)进行了比较。研究结果与先前的研究一致,表明改善动物福利通常会给生产者带来成本。然而,断奶前社会化在 38%的情况下产生了中性或积极的净效应,应该成为行业中推广控制攻击行为的核心措施。让猪接触合成母体信息素并不会提高盈利能力,但净成本很小,并且在具有动物福利目标的一部分农民的 WTP 范围内。为了将现有的建筑改造成大群体饲养猪而产生的净成本超出了农民的 WTP 范围。本研究采用的将 SPB 与来自该行业的 WTP 相结合的方法,应该扩展到其他动物福利问题。