Putyora Endre, Brocklehurst Sarah, Tuyttens Frank, Sandilands Victoria
Department of Veterinary and Biosciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, 9820 Merelbeke, Belgium.
Department of Agriculture, Horticulture and Engineering Sciences, Scotland's Rural College (SRUC), Edinburgh EH25 9RG, UK.
Animals (Basel). 2023 Apr 4;13(7):1251. doi: 10.3390/ani13071251.
The positive welfare of commercial animals presents many benefits, making the accurate assessment of welfare important. Assessments frequently use behaviour to determine welfare state; however, nighttime behaviours are often ignored. Sleep behaviour may offer new insights into welfare assessments. This study aimed to establish a baseline for sleep behaviour in laying hens and to then apply mild short-term disturbances and observe the subsequent effects. Twelve laying hens were divided into four batches and were surgically implanted with electroencephalogram (EEG) devices to record their brain activity. The batches were subjected to undisturbed, disturbed and recovery types of nights. Disturbed nights consisted of systematic sequences of disturbance application (wind, 90 dB noise or 20 lux light) applied one at a time for 5 min every 30 min from 21:00 to 03:00 (lights off period: 19:00-05:00). Sleep state was scored using EEG data and behaviour data from infrared cameras. Over all the types of night hens engaged in both SWS (58%) and REM sleep (18%) during lights off. When applied, the disturbances were effective at altering the amounts of wakefulness and SWS (Time × Type of Night, < 0.001, = 0.017, respectively), whereas REM sleep was unaltered ( = 0.540). There was no evidence of carry-over effects over the following day or night. Laying hens may be resilient to short-term sleep disruption by compensating for this in the same night, suggesting that these disturbances do not impact their long-term welfare (i.e., over days). Sleep behaviour potentially offers a unique means of assessing an aspect of animal welfare that, to date, has been poorly studied.
商业养殖动物的良好福利带来诸多益处,因此准确评估福利状况至关重要。评估通常利用行为来确定福利状态;然而,夜间行为常常被忽视。睡眠行为或许能为福利评估提供新的见解。本研究旨在建立蛋鸡睡眠行为的基线,然后施加轻度短期干扰并观察后续影响。12只蛋鸡被分成四组,通过手术植入脑电图(EEG)设备以记录其大脑活动。这些组分别经历无干扰、受干扰和恢复阶段的夜晚。受干扰的夜晚包括从21:00至03:00(熄灯时间段:19:00 - 05:00)每隔30分钟依次施加一次(风、90分贝噪音或20勒克斯光照)持续5分钟的系统性干扰序列。利用EEG数据和红外摄像机的行为数据对睡眠状态进行评分。在所有类型的夜晚中,母鸡在熄灯期间经历了慢波睡眠(SWS,58%)和快速眼动睡眠(REM,18%)。施加干扰时,干扰有效地改变了清醒时间和慢波睡眠的时长(时间×夜晚类型,分别为<0.001和 = 0.017),而快速眼动睡眠未改变( = 0.540)。没有证据表明在接下来的白天或夜晚存在遗留效应。蛋鸡可能通过在同一夜晚进行补偿来抵御短期睡眠干扰,这表明这些干扰不会影响它们的长期福利(即数天内)。睡眠行为可能提供了一种独特的手段来评估动物福利的一个方面,而这一方面迄今为止研究较少。