Animals in Science and Society, Department of Population Health Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Animals in Science and Society, Department of Population Health Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Poult Sci. 2023 Aug;102(8):102801. doi: 10.1016/j.psj.2023.102801. Epub 2023 May 24.
Severe feather pecking, the pulling out of feathers of conspecifics, is a major welfare issue in laying hens. Possible underlying causes are fearfulness and lack of foraging opportunities. Because early life is a crucial stage in behavioral development, adapting the incubation and rearing environment to the birds' needs may reduce fearfulness and prevent the development of feather pecking. In a 2 × 2 factorial design study, we investigated whether a green light-dark cycle throughout incubation, which resembles natural incubation circumstances more than the standard dark incubation, and foraging enrichment with live larvae during rearing reduce fearfulness and feather pecking and increase foraging behavior of laying hen pullets from an early age onwards. In this 2-batch experiment, 1,100 ISA Brown eggs were incubated under either 0 h of light/24 h of darkness or 12 h of green LED light/12 h of darkness. After hatching, 400 female chicks (200 per batch) were housed in 44 pens (8-10 chicks per pen). During the entire rearing phase (0-17 wk of age), half of the pens received black soldier fly larvae in a food puzzle as foraging enrichment. We assessed fear of novel objects and humans, feather pecking, plumage condition, foraging behavior, and recovery time after a 3-fold vaccination (acute stressor). A slight increase in the number of foraging bouts was only seen with larvae provisioning (rate ratio 1.19, 95% CI 1.02-1.29, P = 0.008). Neither lighted incubation nor larvae provisioning affected fearfulness, feather pecking, plumage condition or recovery time after vaccination. In conclusion, the present study showed no effects of light during incubation and minor effects of foraging enrichment during rearing on the behavior of laying hen pullets. Further research is recommended on other welfare aspects.
严重的啄羽行为,即同类拔毛,是蛋鸡的一个主要福利问题。可能的潜在原因是恐惧和缺乏觅食机会。由于早期是行为发展的关键阶段,因此适应孵化和育雏环境以满足鸟类的需求可能会减少恐惧并防止啄羽行为的发展。在一项 2×2 析因设计研究中,我们研究了整个孵化期的绿光-暗光周期(比标准的暗光孵化更能模拟自然孵化环境)和在育雏期间用活幼虫进行觅食丰富化是否可以减少蛋鸡育雏的恐惧和啄羽行为,并增加其觅食行为。在这项 2 批实验中,1100 个 ISA 棕色鸡蛋在 0 小时光照/24 小时黑暗或 12 小时绿光 LED 光照/12 小时黑暗的条件下孵化。孵化后,400 只雌性小鸡(每批 200 只)被饲养在 44 个围栏中(每个围栏 8-10 只小鸡)。在整个育雏阶段(0-17 周龄),一半的围栏中用食物拼图提供黑水虻幼虫作为觅食丰富化。我们评估了对新物体和人类的恐惧、啄羽行为、羽毛状况、觅食行为以及 3 倍疫苗接种后的恢复时间(急性应激源)。只有提供幼虫时才会略微增加觅食次数(比率比 1.19,95%置信区间 1.02-1.29,P=0.008)。光照孵化或幼虫提供均未影响恐惧、啄羽、羽毛状况或疫苗接种后的恢复时间。总之,本研究表明,孵化期间光照和育雏期间觅食丰富化对蛋鸡育雏的行为没有影响。建议进一步研究其他福利方面。