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Analysis of Housing Risk Factors for the Welfare of Lean and Heavy Pigs in a Sample of European Fattening Farms
- Source :
- Animals, Volume 11, Issue 11, Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI, Animals, Vol 11, Iss 3221, p 3221 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Simple Summary Animal welfare is a major challenge that most European pig producers have been facing in recent decades to comply with EU legislation and to meet the increasing societal and market demand for pork produced in a sustainable way. Pig welfare is ruled in terms of minimum requirements for housing and management, but stakeholders have considered that both farm-level and animal-based indicators are fundamental to monitor animal welfare. Some of the welfare issues still affecting fattening pigs are the lack of space, bedding and manipulable material, and the continued practice of routine tail docking of pigs. Tail docking is applied routinely across most European countries to reduce the occurrence of severe tail biting lesions, despite its ban in the EU. An observational study on 51 pig farms in seven EU countries, aimed at investigating housing risk factors for the welfare of finishing pigs, showed that body weight and presence of bedded solid floored resting area (BED) identify three clusters of farms. The outcomes of this study confirmed that BED and larger availability of space per pig, above the minimum requirement of EU legislation, can limit the occurrence of lesions in pigs with undocked tails. Abstract Pig welfare is affected by housing conditions, the minimum requirements of which are set up by EU legislation. Animal and non-animal-based measures are useful indicators to investigate housing risk factors for pig welfare. An observational study on 51 pig farms in seven EU countries, aimed at investigating housing risk factors for the welfare of finishing pigs, showed body weight and presence of bedded solid floored resting area (BED) identifying three clusters of farms. Farms with BED were featured by no or limited tail docking, larger availability of manipulable materials and lower number of pigs per farm and per annual work unit. In these farms, less skin and ear lesions were found, compared with lean pigs of farms without BED, which were characterized by lower pig space allowance, mortality rate and medication cost. In farms without BED, heavy pigs were featured by more space per pig, more pigs per drinker and higher mortality rate and medication cost per pig, compared to lean pigs. No statistical difference in tail lesions was found between the three farm clusters, although tail docking was performed in all farms without BED and not performed on most farms with BED.
- Subjects :
- pig welfare
040301 veterinary sciences
Veterinary medicine
animal diseases
media_common.quotation_subject
Body lesion scores
Statistical difference
Housing system
fattening pig
Fattening pig
Biology
Body weight
Pig welfare
Eu countries
Tail docking
Article
0403 veterinary science
Animal science
tail docking
Medication cost
SF600-1100
Work unit
Pig farms
media_common
2. Zero hunger
roughage
General Veterinary
Enriched environment
Mortality rate
Roughage
0402 animal and dairy science
Bedding material
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
body lesion scores
040201 dairy & animal science
bedding material
QL1-991
housing system
Animal Science and Zoology
Zoology
Welfare
enriched environment
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20762615
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Animals
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....3a6ef414e5eb5e71177f060b60328801
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11113221