| Literature DB >> 26973843 |
Margrethe Brantsæter1, Janicke Nordgreen1, T Bas Rodenburg2, Fernanda M Tahamtani1, Anastasija Popova1, Andrew M Janczak1.
Abstract
The complexity of the rearing environment is important for behavioral development and fearfulness. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that laying hens reared in a complex aviary system with exposure to mild intermittent stressors would be less fearful, less sensitive to stress, and would use elevated areas of the pen more often as adults than hens reared in a barren cage environment. Laying hens (N = 160) were housed in the same rearing house; half of the birds (n = 80) in an aviary and the other half (n = 80) in cages. At 16 weeks of age, the birds were transported to the experimental facilities. Their behavior was recorded at 19 and 23 weeks of age and analyzed by analysis of variance on individual scores for a fearfulness-related principal component generated using principal component analysis. The results indicate that aviary-reared birds have lower levels of fearfulness compared with cage-reared birds both at 19 weeks and at 23 weeks of age. When comparing the response induced by initial exposure to a novel object at 19 and 23 weeks of age, more aviary-reared birds tended to fly up at 19 weeks compared to the cage-reared birds, indicating a tendency toward a more active behavioral response in the aviary-reared birds than in cage-reared birds. There was no difference between treatments in the flight response at 23 weeks. The groups did not differ in defecation frequency or the concentration of fecal corticosterone metabolites at either age. At 19 weeks, observation of the spatial distribution in the home pens indicated that more aviary-reared birds spent time on the low perch, the elevated platform, and the upper perch, compared to the cage-reared birds. However, at 23 weeks of age, these differences were no longer detected. The results of this study support the hypothesis that increased environmental complexity during rearing reduces fearfulness of adult laying hens.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; chicken; fear; fearfulness; laying hen; rearing; stress
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973843 PMCID: PMC4770049 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2016.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Figure illustrating the test arena where the human approach test and the novel object test was performed. The human or novel object (NO) was positioned just outside the transparent wall. The birds were placed in the arena through the start box (S). The EthoVision XT camera was mounted in the ceiling above zone 3 and pointed down. There was an additional camera (cam) next to the human/novel object. Numbers 1–5 represent zones of increasing distance from the test stimuli.
Loading matrix from the principal component analysis (PCA) based on behavioral tests at 19 and 23 weeks of age.
| Comp. 1 | Comp. 2 | Comp. 3 | Comp. 4 | Comp. 5 | Comp. 6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distance moved (cm) | −0.2171 | 0.2030 | −0.0276 | −0.2885 | −0.1846 | |
| Duration standing still (s) | 0.2413 | −0.3455 | −0.0718 | −0.1217 | ||
| Duration 1–4 (s) | −0.1972 | −0.3168 | 0.2164 | 0.0291 | ||
| Distance moved (cm) | − | 0.3959 | −0.0666 | −0.2441 | −0.1937 | 0.1808 |
| Duration standing still (s) | −0.1903 | 0.0536 | −0.3079 | 0.1088 | ||
| Duration 1–4 (s) | 0.0931 | 0.2612 | −0.0060 | −0.0414 | ||
| 3.325 | 0.9778 | 0.9108 | 0.4229 | 0.2676 | 0.0960 | |
| Variation explained (%) | 55.417 | 16.296 | 15.179 | 7.048 | 4.460 | 1.600 |
| Cumulative variation (%) | 55.417 | 71.714 | 86.893 | 93.940 | 98.400 | 100.00 |
The PCA generated six components (Comp. 1–6). Component loadings >0.40 are written in bold. Duration 1–4 indicates the duration of time spent outside of the area farthest away from the novel object or human.
Figure 2Mean ± SD scores for Component 1 for aviary-reared and cage-reared birds at 19 and 23 weeks of age. Principal component analysis was conducted to generate individual scores for a component measuring “fearfulness” (scores for Component 1). To avoid negative values, three was added to all component scores in the figure. Significant differences are marked *.
Figure 3Figures showing the flight response for aviary-reared and cage-reared birds at 19 and 23 weeks of age. Black columns indicate aviary-reared birds. White columns indicate cage-reared birds. The x-axis indicates the zone. Zone 1 was closest to novel object and zone 5 was the start zone farthest away from the novel object. The y-axis indicates the number of birds that did not fly at 19 weeks of age (A), the number of birds that flew at 19 weeks of age (B), the number of birds that did not fly at 23 weeks of age (C) and the number of birds that flew at 23 weeks of age (D).
Showing results of the Wilcoxon test for distribution of birds in the home pens at 19 and 23 weeks of age.
| Aviary-reared birds | Cage-reared birds | Test statistic | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | 25th–75th percentile | Median | 25th–75th percentile | ||||
| 19 weeks | Top perch | 16.67 | 10.42–22.92 | 5.21 | 2.08–14.06 | −289 | <0.0001 |
| Elevated platform | 19.20 | 13.02–25 | 12.08 | 6.25–22.08 | −183 | 0.0088 | |
| Low perch | 20.83 | 14.36–22.92 | 12.5 | 10.42–18.44 | −204.5 | 0.0045 | |
| 23 weeks | Top perch | 9.38 | 4.69–14.58 | 6.25 | 2.08–10.42 | −41 | 0.1014 |
| Elevated platform | 12.5 | 7.71–22.40 | 6.25 | 4.17–16.15 | −34.5 | 0.1381 | |
| Low perch | 15.63 | 10.94–18.75 | 13.54 | 8.33–18.75 | −30 | 0.2364 | |
At 19 weeks, aviary-reared birds were positioned significantly more often on all elevated areas in the home pen, whereas at 23 weeks of age there was no difference between the treatment groups.