Effects of Positive Human Contact during Gestation on the Behaviour, Physiology and Reproductive Performance of Sows

Hayes, Megan E. and Hemsworth, Lauren M. and Morrison, Rebecca S. and Butler, Kym L. and Rice, Maxine and Rault, Jean-Loup and Hemsworth, Paul H. (2021) Effects of Positive Human Contact during Gestation on the Behaviour, Physiology and Reproductive Performance of Sows. Animals, 11 (1). p. 214. ISSN 2076-2615

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Abstract

Previous positive interactions with humans may ameliorate the stress response of farm animals to aversive routine practices such as painful or stressful procedures, particularly those associated with stockpeople. We studied the effects of positive handling by providing younger (parity 1–2) and older (parity 3–8) sows housed in pens of fifteen (n = 24 pens in total) with either positive human contact (+HC) or routine human contact (control) during gestation. The +HC treatment involved a familiar stockperson patting and scratching sows and was imposed at a pen-level for 2 min daily. Measurements studied included behavioural, physiological and productivity variables. The +HC sows showed reduced avoidance of the stockperson conducting pregnancy testing and vaccination in the home pens, however the behavioural and cortisol responses of sows in a standard unfamiliar human approach test did not differ. There were no effects of +HC on aggression between sows, serum cortisol or serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor concentrations during gestation, or on the behavioural and cortisol response to being moved to farrowing crates. There were also no effects of +HC on the maternal responsiveness of sows, farrowing rate or the number of piglets born alive, stillborn or weaned. Sows in the +HC pens reduced their physical interaction with the stockpeople imposing the treatment after 2 weeks, which suggests the sows may have habituated to the novel or possible rewarding elements of the handling treatment. This experiment shows that regular positive interaction with stockpeople does reduce sows’ fear of stockpeople, but does not always confer stress resilence.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: handling; positive human contact; stress; animal welfare; reproduction; sows
Subjects: STM Repository > Biological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 17 Jan 2023 07:22
Last Modified: 30 Mar 2024 03:51
URI: http://classical.goforpromo.com/id/eprint/919

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