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Pigs’ preferences for rooting materials measured in a three-choice maze-test

Authors :
Margit Bak Jensen
Merete Studnitz
Erik Jørgensen
Lene Juul Pedersen
Ulrich Halekoh
Source :
Jensen, M B, Studnitz, M, Halekoh, U, Pedersen, L J & Jørgensen, E 2008, ' Pigs' preferences for rooting materials measured in a three-choice maze-test ', Applied Animal Behaviour Science, vol. 112, no. 3-4, pp. 270-283 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2007.07.012
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

The aim of this experiment was to investigate pigs’ preferences for rooting materials. Eighteen materials were allocated to six categories each of which consisted of three similar materials based on characteristics such as structure, size of particles, complexity, destructibility and digestibility. Twelve pairs of pigs chose among the three materials of each of the six categories in a balanced design. Within each category each pair was given four instantaneous choices among the three materials in a three-armed maze. ‘No choice’ was scored if the pigs did not enter one of the maze-arms within 90 s. Thus there were four options in each choice situation. The results were analysed using a random utility model incorporating random intercepts to account for the repeated testing of the same animals. The pigs expressed clear preferences within the category EARTH, where compost and peat were preferred to wood-shavings and no choice. In the category CHIP the most probable rank-order was spruce chip, willow chip, fir chip and no choice, while in the category ROUGH the most probable rank-order was maize-silage, grass silage, sugar beets and no choice. However, in these two categories none of the probabilities were sufficiently large to signify a preference for any of the three materials although the probabilities of the ‘no choice’ option were low. The pigs expressed no preferences among any of the four options including ‘no choice’ in the categories TOY (sisal robe, Bite-Rite, wooden beam), HAY (alfalfa hay mixed with straw, seed grass hay, barley straw with under-seed), and STRAW (long straw, chopped straw and straw pellets).

Details

ISSN :
01681591
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied Animal Behaviour Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7e0ca1da64057d7163a5a842eab5a123
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2007.07.012