Paul Elizabeth S, Browne William, Mendl Michael T, Caplen Gina, Held Suzanne, Trevarthen Anna, Nicol Christine J
Bristol Veterinary School, University of Bristol, Langford House, Langford BS40 5DU, UK.
School of Education, University of Bristol, 35 Berkeley Square, Bristol BS8 1JA, UK.
Appl Anim Behav Sci. 2023 Apr;261:105883. doi: 10.1016/j.applanim.2023.105883. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
Most studies of the effects of housing and husbandry on animals' affective states and welfare investigate the impact of living conditions, comparing for example, animals living in enriched environments with those living in non-enriched ones. in living conditions, including from more to less enriched environments, have also been found to have effects on measures of affective state and welfare in some species. But these studies have not investigated whether it is the that has affected the animals (e.g., worsening conditions), or simply the nature of their (e.g., non-enriched). Here, we hypothesised that laying hens living in worsening conditions across a six-week period (gradually moving from preferred to non-preferred living conditions; "Trajectory to Non-Preferred", TNP, n = 30), would show evidence of more negative affective states and poorer welfare than those living continuously in non-preferred conditions for the same duration ("Stable Non-Preferred", SNP, n = 30). We also hypothesised that hens living in improving conditions (gradually moving from non-preferred to preferred living conditions; "Trajectory to Preferred", TP, n = 30), would show evidence of more positive affective states and better welfare than those living continuously in preferred conditions ("Stable Preferred", SP, n = 30). The preferred living condition provided extensive resources and intermittent rewarding events (such as the delivery of food treats) known to be valued and preferred by most hens, while the non-preferred living condition provided just basic resources and intermittent aversive events (e.g., loud noises). The hens' affective states and welfare were measured using home-pen behavioural observations, body condition assessments, physiological stress measures (e.g., blood corticosterone, glucose, etc.), physical challenge tests, and judgement bias tests. A number of differences between hens in the trajectory and stable living conditions were found: TP hens were lighter, showed more foraging behaviour and less standing alert and head-shaking than SP hens, while TNP hens showed more head-shaking, mild feather pecking and aggressive attacking of pen mates than SNP hens. However, some of these differences failed to reach significance following Benjamini adjustments for multiple testing. The groups also did not differ in their judgement biases (measured in a sub-sample of 12 hens per experimental group), response to physical challenges, or measures of physiological stress. We conclude that the hens in the present study showed some evidence of responsiveness to 'affective trajectories' in their living conditions, but no definitive effects on their affective states and welfare.
大多数关于饲养环境对动物情感状态和福利影响的研究,都在探究生活条件的影响,例如,比较生活在丰富环境中的动物与生活在非丰富环境中的动物。研究还发现,生活条件的变化,包括从丰富程度较高到较低的环境变化,在某些物种中也会对情感状态和福利指标产生影响。但这些研究并未调查是环境的恶化(例如,条件变差)影响了动物,还是仅仅是环境本身的性质(例如,非丰富环境)产生了影响。在此,我们假设,在六周时间里生活条件逐渐变差的蛋鸡(从偏好的生活条件逐渐转变为非偏好的生活条件;“向非偏好状态转变”轨迹,TNP,n = 30),与在相同时间段内持续生活在非偏好条件下的蛋鸡(“稳定的非偏好状态”,SNP,n = 30)相比,会表现出更多负面情感状态的迹象,且福利状况更差。我们还假设,生活条件逐渐改善的蛋鸡(从非偏好的生活条件逐渐转变为偏好的生活条件;“向偏好状态转变”轨迹,TP,n = 30),与持续生活在偏好条件下的蛋鸡(“稳定的偏好状态”,SP,n = 30)相比,会表现出更多积极情感状态的迹象,且福利状况更好。偏好的生活条件提供了丰富的资源和间歇性的奖励事件(如提供食物奖励),这些资源和事件是大多数母鸡重视和偏好的,而非偏好的生活条件仅提供基本资源和间歇性的厌恶事件(如大声噪音)。通过鸡舍内行为观察、身体状况评估、生理应激指标测量(如血液皮质酮、葡萄糖等)、身体挑战测试和判断偏差测试来衡量母鸡的情感状态和福利。研究发现,处于不同轨迹和稳定生活条件下的母鸡存在一些差异:与SP组母鸡相比,TP组母鸡体重更轻,表现出更多的觅食行为,站立警觉和摇头行为更少;而与SNP组母鸡相比,TNP组母鸡表现出更多的摇头行为、轻度啄羽行为以及对同舍伙伴的攻击性攻击行为。然而,在进行Benjamini多重检验校正后,其中一些差异未达到显著水平。各实验组在判断偏差(在每个实验组的12只母鸡子样本中测量)、对身体挑战的反应或生理应激指标方面也没有差异。我们得出结论,本研究中的母鸡表现出了一些对生活条件中“情感轨迹”有反应的证据,但对其情感状态和福利没有明确的影响。