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Chewable materials before weaning reduce tail biting in growing pigs
- Source :
- Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 157:14-22
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Tail biting in pigs is a multi-factorial problem, and the early rearing environment has been proposed as a potential previously unidentified factor. The aim of this study was to test whether access to chewable material from birth to weaning reduces later tail biting. Undocked litters of 59 sows were allocated to two treatments. In the rope-and-paper treatment ( N =30), the farrowing pens were furnished from birth to weaning with 10 pieces of sisal rope and one plastic ball suspended on the wall, and the piglets were given newspaper and wood shavings twice a day. In the control treatment ( N =29), plastic ball and wood shavings were provided. The average group size was 11 piglets per pen. The piglets were weaned during week 4 after birth and transferred to growing pens, combining two or three litters from the same treatment to each pen, on average 18 pigs per pen. The growing pens were identical for both treatment groups: each had three pieces of sisal rope and a plastic chewing toy. Wood shavings were given twice a day. Behaviour was recorded on video during weeks 2, 3 and 9 after birth. Tail damage was scored during week 9. During weeks 2 and 3 after birth, oral-nasal manipulation of other piglets was less frequent in the rope-and-paper pens than in the controls ( P P P =0.001). During week 9, when both treatment groups had spent five weeks in identical post-weaning environments, oral-nasal manipulation of pen mates and objects no longer differed significantly between the treatment groups ( P >0.1), but there was a significant difference in tail damage. Severe tail damage (part of tail missing, or wounds with inflammation) had a mean prevalence of 9.8% in the pigs that had paper and ropes before weaning, and 32.1% in the controls ( P P =0.002). In undamaged tails, there was no significant difference between the treatment groups ( P >0.1). It is concluded that providing chewable materials in early life has promising potential for reducing the severity of later tail biting.
- Subjects :
- Tail-biting
Control treatment
Feather pecking
Veterinary medicine
040301 veterinary sciences
medicine.medical_treatment
Significant difference
0402 animal and dairy science
Wood shavings
Animal-assisted therapy
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Biology
040201 dairy & animal science
Early life
0403 veterinary science
Animal science
Food Animals
medicine
Weaning
Animal Science and Zoology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01681591
- Volume :
- 157
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Applied Animal Behaviour Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........ce6e2ec60a3d2751781ce89160c74873
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2014.01.004