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The impact of gentle contacts on ease of handling, welfare, and growth of calves and on quality of veal meat

Authors :
Isabelle Veissier
Xavier Fernandez
P. Le Neindre
Xavier Boivin
B.J. Lensink
Philippe Pradel
Unité de Recherches sur les Herbivores (URH)
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)
Station de recherches sur la viande
Domaine expérimental de Marcenat (UE MARCENAT)
ProdInra, Migration
Source :
Europe PubMed Central, Journal of Animal Science, Journal of Animal Science, American Society of Animal Science, 2000, 78, pp.1219-1226, Scopus-Elsevier

Abstract

It has been demonstrated previously that regularly stroking and letting calves suck fingers leads to less avoidance and more approach behavior of the calves toward people. To examine whether these positive contacts affect the welfare and productivity of calves and the quality of veal meat we used 22 veal calves housed in individual crates. Half of them received minimal contact with the stockperson (controls), and the other half were given additional gentle contacts around meals, by stroking the calves and allowing them to suck the stockperson's fingers, during the entire fattening period (21 wk). Welfare was assessed through behavioral reactivity (reactions to handling, to surprise stimuli, and to novelty), neuroendocrine responses to stress (cortisol in response to an ACTH challenge, catecholamine-synthesizing enzymes), and health (number of medical treatments, abomasal lesions). Calf productivity was assessed through growth rates and meat quality through glycolytic potential (an estimator of resting glycogen level in muscle), pH, and color. Calves that received gentle contacts were less agitated (P.01) and tended to defecate less (P = .08) when handled in a cart on wheels than the control calves, but no treatment effects were found in reactivity to novelty and surprise stimuli, responses to ACTH, and catecholamine synthetic potential. Calves given gentle contacts had fewer abomasal lesions than controls (0/11 vs 4/11, P = .05). The glycolytic potential of the semimembranosus muscle was higher in calves that received gentle contacts than in controls (172.6 vs 154.1 micromol/g, P.05), but no treatment effects were observed on meat pH, meat color, or growth rates. It is concluded that gentling veal calves reduces their reactions to handling. Gentle contacts reduce the reaction to transport shown by differences in glycolytic potential. In addition, the reduction in reactions to handling and the decreased incidence of abomasal lesions can contribute to an improvement of the calves' welfare.

Details

ISSN :
00218812 and 15253163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Europe PubMed Central, Journal of Animal Science, Journal of Animal Science, American Society of Animal Science, 2000, 78, pp.1219-1226, Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7641c50886c24d869fbf601cc17e5c7b