| Literature DB >> 24198969 |
Lilia Thays Sonoda1, Michaela Fels, Sally Rauterberg, Stefano Viazzi, Gunel Ismayilova, Maciej Oczak, Claudia Bahr, Marcella Guarino, Erik Vranken, Daniel Berckmans, Jörg Hartung.
Abstract
It is known that pigs raised in enriched environments express less aggressive behaviour. For this reason, a new method of cognitive environmental enrichment was experimented at the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Germany. In the first phase, 78 suckling piglets were trained to learn the link between a sound given by an electronic feeder and a feed reward in the form of chocolate candies during a period of 8 days. In the second phase, the same piglets were used in resident-intruder tests to verify the potential of the feeding system to interrupt aggressive behaviour. The analysis of all training rounds revealed that piglets learned the commands during 8 days of training and the interest of the piglets increased within training days (P < 0.05). In the resident-intruder test, 79.5% of aggressive interactions were broken by feeder activation. In interactions where either the aggressor or the receiver reacted, a high number of fights were stopped (96.7% versus 93.1%) indicating that it was not relevant if the aggressor or the receiver responded to the feeder activation. We conclude that the electronic feeding system has the potential to be used as cognitive enrichment for piglets, being suitable for reducing aggressive behaviour in resident-intruder situations.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24198969 PMCID: PMC3807840 DOI: 10.1155/2013/389186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Vet Sci ISSN: 2090-4452
Figure 1Floor plan of the farrowing pens where piglets were trained for 8 days.
Figure 2Floor plan of the weaning pens (experimental arena included) where trained piglets performed the resident-intruder test.
Percentage of piglets around the feeder after 2, 5, 15, 30, 45, and 60 seconds of the activation of the feeder on different training days. Different letters indicate significant differences (P < 0.05).
| Reaction in: | 2 sec (%) | 5 sec (%) | 15 sec (%) | 30 sec (%) | 45 sec (%) | 60 sec (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 26.05 | 34.68a | 43.40a | 36.69a | 43.24a | 42.06 |
| Day 2 | 18.76a | 30.38a | 44.23a | 48.12 | 47.10 | 44.81 |
| Day 3 | 28.58 | 54.83b | 67.63b | 69.19b | 61.87b | 52.24 |
| Day 4 | 33.89 | 50.45 | 56.54 | 56.34 | 52.21 | 43.09 |
| Day 5 | 22.47a | 45.32b | 52.82 | 50.26 | 45.80 | 39.82 |
| Day 6 | 31.80 | 55.92 | 56.99 | 54.54 | 50.34 | 43.76 |
| Day 7 | 28.10 | 55.58 | 61.38b | 59.70 | 58.59 | 48.78 |
| Day 8 | 38.24b | 63.17b | 63.25b | 59.20b | 51.50 | 43.80 |
|
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| All days (means) | 29.56 | 51.21 | 57.00 | 55.17 | 51.51 | 44.44 |
Figure 3Kind of reaction (no fight, stopped, and not stopped aggressive interactions) in relation to the total percentage of interactions, n = 268 interactions (P < 0.05).
Figure 4Piglets' reactions in relation to the aggressive interactions which were stopped after the activation of the feeder concerning a total of 213 stopped aggressive interactions (P < 0.05).
Figure 5Percentage of aggressive interactions stopped and not stopped when only the receiver reacted after the activation of the feeder concerning a total of 102 stopped aggressive interactions (P < 0.05).
Figure 6Percentage of aggressive interactions stopped and not stopped when only the aggressor reacted after the activation of the feeder concerning a total of 121 stopped aggressive interactions (P < 0.05).
Figure 7Kind of reaction (from aggressor, receiver, or no reaction or no fight) in relation to the total percentage of encounters from a total of 268 interactions (P < 0.05).
Figure 8Reaction of the aggressor and the receiver in relation to the aggressive interactions which were stopped after the activation of the feeder from a total of 213 stopped aggressive interactions (P < 0.05).