Boys Rebecca M, Beausoleil Ngaio J, Pawley Matthew D M, Betty Emma L, Stockin Karen A
Cetacean Ecology Research Group, School of Natural Sciences, College of Sciences, Massey University, Private Bag 102-904, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.
Animal Welfare Science and Bioethics Centre, School of Veterinary Science, College of Sciences, Massey University, Private Bag 11-222, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand.
Animals (Basel). 2022 Jul 21;12(14):1861. doi: 10.3390/ani12141861.
Despite the known benefit of considering welfare within wildlife conservation and management, there remains a lack of data to inform such evaluations. To assess animal welfare, relevant information must be captured scientifically and systematically. A key first step is identifying potential indicators of welfare and the practicality of their measurement. We assessed the feasibility of evaluating potential welfare indicators from opportunistically gathered video footage of four stranded odontocete species (n = 53) at 14 stranding events around New Zealand. The first stranded cetacean ethogram was compiled, including 30 different behaviours, 20 of which were observed in all four species. Additionally, thirteen types of human intervention were classified. A subset of 49 live stranded long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas edwardii) were assessed to determine indicator prevalence and to quantify behaviours. Four ‘welfare status’ and six ‘welfare alerting’ non-behavioural indicators could be consistently evaluated from the footage. Additionally, two composite behavioural indicators were feasible. Three human intervention types (present, watering, and touching) and five animal behaviours (tail flutter, dorsal fin flutter, head lift, tail lift, and head side-to-side) were prevalent (>40% of individuals). Our study highlights the potential for non-invasive, remote assessments via video footage and represents an initial step towards developing a systematic, holistic welfare assessment framework for stranded cetaceans.
尽管在野生动物保护和管理中考虑动物福利具有已知的益处,但仍缺乏用于此类评估的数据。为了评估动物福利,必须科学且系统地收集相关信息。关键的第一步是确定潜在的福利指标及其测量的可行性。我们评估了从新西兰各地14次搁浅事件中机会性收集的四种搁浅齿鲸物种(n = 53)的视频片段中评估潜在福利指标的可行性。编制了首个搁浅鲸类行为图谱,包括30种不同行为,其中20种在所有四个物种中均有观察到。此外,还对13种人类干预类型进行了分类。对49头存活搁浅的长鳍领航鲸(Globicephala melas edwardii)进行了评估,以确定指标的普遍性并量化行为。可以从视频片段中持续评估四个“福利状态”和六个“福利警报”非行为指标。此外,两个综合行为指标也是可行的。三种人类干预类型(在场、浇水和触摸)和五种动物行为(尾鳍摆动、背鳍摆动、抬头、抬尾和头部左右摆动)很常见(>40%的个体)。我们的研究突出了通过视频片段进行非侵入性远程评估的潜力,并代表了朝着为搁浅鲸类建立系统、全面的福利评估框架迈出的第一步。