1. Assessment of Donkey (Equus asinus) Welfare at Slaughter in Ghana.
- Author
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Fletcher, Katharine, Limon, Georgina, Agongo, Eric, Akunzule, Anthony, Essel, Gloria, Padalino, Barbara, Grist, Andrew, and Gibson, Troy John
- Subjects
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BLUNT trauma , *LOSS of consciousness , *VETERINARY pathology , *SLAUGHTERING , *EQUUS - Abstract
Simple Summary: Donkey slaughter in Ghana was assessed through observing human–animal interactions prior to slaughter, and different methods of slaughter (slaughter without pre-stunning and two different methods of blunt force trauma to the head) were evaluated. Animals were hit multiple times by personnel during handling and movement. At slaughter, animals killed through neck cutting without pre-stunning showed signs of consciousness up to a mean time of 96.5 s. Animals experiencing blunt force trauma to the head took up to 166.9 s to lose consciousness when using a wooden pole. This method was five times more likely to be ineffective compared to blunt force trauma with a metal hammer. This study shows that donkeys in Ghana currently experience welfare compromise during all stages of the slaughter process; in particular, through aversive handling practises and ineffective slaughter methods, which delay the time to loss of consciousness and potentially increase suffering. Donkey slaughter in West Africa has received limited scientific attention, despite increasing over recent years. This study aimed to explore factors affecting donkey welfare, both ante-mortem and at slaughter, in the Upper East region of Ghana. A total of 134 donkeys at five different slaughter points were assessed using animal-based indicators. Slaughter involved either blunt force trauma (BFT) using a wooden pole (1 location) or a metal hammer (2 locations); or non-stun ventral neck incision (VNI) (2 locations). Time to loss of consciousness (or return) was assessed, with behavioural and brainstem signs of sensibility/consciousness. Negative human–animal interactions occurred ante-mortem, with animals struck multiple times and handled using aversive methods. Donkeys hit on the head with the wooden pole were five times more likely to be ineffectively concussed (p < 0.001, OR: 5.4, CI: 1.9–15.4) compared to the hammer and took significantly longer to lose consciousness (p < 0.001). The mean time to loss of corneal reflex for those hit by wooden pole was 166.9 s (SD 21.1; range: 79–425 s), compared to just one animal displaying corneal reflex for 59 s after being hit by metal hammer. For those animals slaughtered through VNI, corneal reflex was observed for a mean time of 96.5 s (SD 4.3, range 26–164 s). The findings of this study highlight major concerns regarding the methods used for donkey slaughter in the Upper East region in Ghana, particularly regarding aversive ante-mortem handling and prolonged time to loss of consciousness during VNI and ineffective BFT in inducing unconsciousness by concussion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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