| Literature DB >> 26950876 |
Akitsu Tozawa, Shigefumi Tanaka, Shusuke Sato.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to clarify the most effective component of grazing for improving welfare of fattening pigs. This study compared welfare indicators of 20 fattening pigs aged 100 to 124 days (the prior period) and 138 to 164 days (the latter period) in an indoor housing system (IS), an outdoor pasturing system (OP), a concrete floor paddock system (CF), a concrete floor paddock system with fresh grass (FG), or a soil floor paddock system (SF). The last three treatments include important components of a grazing system: extra space, grass feed, and soil floor. Behavior, wounds on the body, and performances, measured as average daily gain (ADG) and feed conversion ratio, were observed. CF pigs behaved similarly to IS pigs. FG pigs showed higher levels of foraging, chewing and activity. SF pigs engaged in higher levels of foraging, exploring, activity, and rooting, and showed a similar amount of playing behavior as OP pigs. ADG was the same in all treatments at the prior period, and increased in the order FG, IS, CF, SF, and OP at the latter. The behaviors and performance of SF pigs resembled those of OP which seemed to indicate a consistently higher standard of welfare than the other treatments. In conclusion, the existence of a soil floor is the most important component of a pasture for improving the welfare of pigs.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior; Grass; Grazing; Pigs; Soil; Space Allowance
Year: 2016 PMID: 26950876 PMCID: PMC4811796 DOI: 10.5713/ajas.15.0190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian-Australas J Anim Sci ISSN: 1011-2367 Impact factor: 2.509
Figure 1Schematic diagram of an open-air roofed pen and a paddock.
Ingredient and composition of the diet (as-fed basis, %)
| Items | |
|---|---|
| Ingredient | |
| Corn, grain sorghum | 67 |
| Soybean oil cake, rapeseed oil cake | 24 |
| Distillers dried grains with solubles | 3 |
| Fish meal | 1 |
| Others | 5 |
| Animal oil and fat, CaOH2, HCl, Critic acid | |
| Acidum tartaricum, Malic acid, Silicic acid | |
| Composition | |
| Crude protein | ≥16.0 |
| Crude fat | ≥4.0 |
| Crude fiber | ≤5.0 |
| Crude ash | ≤7.0 |
| Ca | ≥0.5 |
| P | ≥0.4 |
| Total digestible nutrients | ≥80.0 |
Ethogram of pig state and event behaviors
| Behavior | |
|---|---|
| Behavior as a state | |
| Foraging | Total time of feeding, grass eating and soil eating |
| Feeding | Gathering, chewing and swallowing concentrates |
| Grass eating | Gathering, chewing and swallowing fresh grasses |
| Soil eating | Chewing and swallowing soil |
| Exploring | Sniffing surrounding environment, rooting and chewing rocks |
| Resting | Animal is not performing any activity |
| Others | The focal animal is not involved in any of the listed behaviors |
| Behavior as an event | |
| Disturbed behavior | Chewing or rooting pen mates, chewing or biting facilities and sham-chewing (re-directed behavior, displacement behavior, vaccum behavior) |
| Playing | Chasing, jumping, and head-knocking with pen mates |
| Chewing | Chewing action with objects (grass, soil, or food) in the pig’s mouth |
| Rooting | Back-and-forth movement of the snout over soil, but not a pen mate |
| Agonistic behavior | Head-butting or aggressive biting at a pen mate |
| Affiliative behavior | Smelling or licking a pen mate |
Time budgets (% in the observation period) of behavioral states in pigs in the five treatments
| Behavior | Treatment | p-value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| IS | OP | CF | FG | SF | ||
| Prior period | ||||||
| Foraging | 18.2±2.6 | 20.1±3.3 | 16.5±2.1 | 34.5±3.9 | 27.2±4.8 | <0.001 |
| Feeding | 18.2±2.6 | 12.8±3.7 | 16.5±2.1 | 18.0±4.3 | 19.9±3.8 | 0.085 |
| Grass eating | - | 4.5±2.0 | - | 16.5±3.1 | - | 0.001 |
| Soil eating | - | 2.8±1.3 | - | - | 7.3±1.1 | 0.002 |
| Exploring | 6.1±2.3 | 11.5±5.2 | 15.5±5.6 | 12.1±6.6 | 23.4±3.2 | 0.002 |
| Resting | 65.5±4.3 | 60.4±2.0 | 55.8±7.8 | 45.8±3.8 | 33.8±8.9 | <0.001 |
| Others | 10.3±3.7 | 8.0±1.9 | 12.2±3.0 | 7.6±1.8 | 15.6±2.8 | - |
| Latter period | ||||||
| Foraging | 12.7±1.0 | 19.9±3.5 | 11.2±1.7 | 16.7±3.5 | 19.5±4.3 | 0.003 |
| Feeding | 12.7±1.0 | 12.7±2.7 | 11.2±1.7 | 8.0±3.1 | 17.3±3.0 | 0.002 |
| Grass eating | - | 5.2±1.6 | - | 8.6±2.8 | - | 0.080 |
| Soil eating | - | 2.1±0.6 | - | - | 2.2±1.2 | 0.838 |
| Exploring | 3.3±0.8 | 12.2±1.0 | 9.2±4.1 | 5.1±1.4 | 16.2±5.2 | <0.001 |
| Resting | 74.3±4.0 | 54.8±6.7 | 71.1±4.3 | 70.4±9.6 | 52.1±5.7 | <0.001 |
| Others | 9.8±3.2 | 13.1±3.4 | 8.5±1.0 | 7.9±6.5 | 12.2±3.5 | - |
IS, indoor housing system; OP, outdoor pasturing system; CF, concrete floor paddock system; FG, concrete floor paddock system with fresh grass; SF, soil floor paddock system; SD, standard deviation.
Values are expressed as mean±SD (%).
The Student’s t-test between OP vs FG or SF.
Means with different letters differ significantly in each behavior (p<0.05).
Means with symbols differ significantly from means in the prior period in each behavior (p<0.1, 0.05, 0.01).
Frequencies of behavioral events in pigs in the five treatments
| Behavior | Treatment | p-value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| IS | OP | CF | FG | SF | ||
| Prior period | ||||||
| Disturbed behavior | 16.8±11.2 | 0.5±0.6 | 3.0±3.2 | 2.3±1.7 | 2.5±4.4 | 0.006 |
| Playing | 0 | 4.5±1.3 | 0.8±0.5 | 1.0±1.4 | 6.3±3.3 | <0.001 |
| Chewing | 2.0±3.4 | 24.8±8.5 | 6.3±5.4 | 29.8±9.1 | 11.3±2.9 | <0.001 |
| Rooting | 0 | 45.5±16.3 | 0.5±1.0 | 0 | 41.0±8.6 | <0.001 |
| Agonistic behavior | 8.0±3.6 | 3.5±1.7 | 4.0±2.2 | 6.3±3.2 | 2.8±1.0 | 0.053 |
| Affiliative behavior | 3.8±2.1 | 2.3±2.2 | 3.5±2.9 | 3.0±2.5 | 3.8±1.7 | 0.868 |
| Latter period | ||||||
| Disturbed behavior | 15.5±11.0 | 1.3±1.5 | 7.5±5.2 | 3.3±2.1 | 1.0±0.8 | 0.011 |
| Playing | 0 | 1.3±1.9 | 0 | 0 | 3.0±1.4 | 0.004 |
| Chewing | 0.5±0.6 | 36.3±6.7 | 2.0±2.2 | 30.8±7.5 | 8.5±3.3 | <0.001 |
| Rooting | 0 | 26.0±11.2 | 0 | 0 | 51.0±6.8 | <0.001 |
| Agonistic behavior | 3.3±1.7 | 3.0±1.2 | 3.0±2.2 | 0 | 1.0±1.2 | 0.018 |
| Affiliative behavior | 2.0±0.8 | 1.3±1.5 | 1.3±1.3 | 2.3±2.6 | 3.5±0.6 | 0.264 |
IS, indoor housing system; OP, outdoor pasturing system; CF, concrete floor paddock system; FG, concrete floor paddock system with fresh grass; SF, soil floor paddock system; SD, standard deviation.
Values are expressed as mean±SD (Expression times/all observed times).
The Student’s t-test between OP vs FG or SF.
Means with different letters differ significantly in each behavior (p<0.05).
Means with symbols differ significantly from means in the prior period in each behavior (p<0.1, 0.05).
The scores of wounds on the body using the Welfare Quality assessment protocol (2009) and performances of pigs in the five treatments
| Treatment | IS | OP | CF | FG | SF | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Score of wounds on body | 47.5±22.7 | 6.25±4.6 | 13.0±4.2 | 7.0±2.7 | 1.5±2.4 | <0.001 |
| Prior period | ||||||
| Average daily gain (kg/d) | 0.76±0.23 | 0.68±0.18 | 0.84±0.05 | 0.53±0.13 | 0.59±0.14 | 0.082 |
| Feed conversion ratio | 3.43 | 3.16 | 3.10 | 4.10 | 3.65 | - |
| Latter period | ||||||
| Average daily gain (kg/d) | 0.67±0.15 | 0.91±0.09 | 0.72±0.09 | 0.52±0.16 | 0.89±0.24 | 0.016 |
| Feed conversion ratio | 3.78 | 3.56 | 3.80 | 4.72 | 3.33 | - |
IS, indoor housing system; OP, outdoor pasturing system; CF, concrete floor paddock system; FG, concrete floor paddock system with fresh grass; SF, soil floor paddock system; SD, standard deviation; ADG, average daily gain.
The Student’s t-test between OP vs FG or SF.
Values are expressed as mean±SD.
Means with different letters differ significantly in each line (p<0.05).
Means with symbols differ significantly from means of ADG in the prior period (p<0.1).