| Literature DB >> 27243965 |
Beth Ann Ventura1, Marina A G von Keyserlingk1, Hannah Wittman2, Daniel M Weary1.
Abstract
Citizens' concerns about farm animal welfare are often dismissed on the assumption that they are not well informed about farming practices. We conducted exploratory surveys of interested citizens (n = 50) before and after a self-guided tour of a 500-head dairy farm. 'Before' survey questions explored perceptions, concerns, and values about dairy cattle farming and welfare, in addition to a short knowledge-based quiz on dairy cattle husbandry. An 'after' survey explored the extent to which these constructs shifted after the tour. Before, most participants correctly answered quiz questions about general feeding and housing practices, but scores were low on questions about specific practices such as cow-calf separation. Participants considered several elements as necessary for a 'good' life for dairy cattle: fresh food and water, pasture access, gentle handling, space, shelter, hygiene, fresh air and sunshine, social companions, absence of stress, health, and safety from predators. These elements reflect a diverse conception of animal welfare that incorporates values for physical and mental well-being, natural living, and humane care. The visit had a mixed effect on perceptions of whether dairy cows had a 'good' life, improving perceptions for a quarter of participants, worsening perceptions in a third, with no shift in the remaining participants. The visit appeared to mitigate some concerns (e.g., provision of adequate food and water, gentle humane care) while reinforcing or eliciting others (e.g., lack of pasture access, early cow-calf separation). Moreover, animal welfare-relevant values held by participants (e.g., natural living, care) appeared to play an important role in influencing perceptions of farm practices. These results suggest that education and exposure to livestock farming may resolve certain concerns, but other concerns will likely persist, especially when practices conflict with deeply held values around animal care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27243965 PMCID: PMC4887196 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0154733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Overview of farm tour survey on citizen perceptions, values, concerns and knowledge relative to dairy cattle welfare.
| Construct | ‘Before’ | ‘After’ |
|---|---|---|
| Perceptions | ||
| Values | ||
| Concerns | ||
| Quiz | All questions asked again. | |
1 The ‘before’ survey was framed to elicit responses regarding dairy farming in general, as participants completed the survey upon arrival at the farm and before they entered the dairy barn. Once the participants had completed their tour of the farm they completed the ‘after’ survey. These questions were all worded to elicit responses specific to the farm they had just toured.
2 QL = open-ended qualitative response, QT = Quantitative, Likert-scale response.
3 As a reflection of attitudes, concerns shed light on underlying values.
4 Quiz questions were asked twice, on both the Before and After surveys. Quiz question order was randomized.
Description of participants who completed both 'before' and 'after' surveys for the dairy farm visit (n = 50).
| Variable | n |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| | 30 |
| | 20 |
| Age | |
| | 7 |
| | 27 |
| | 15 |
| | 1 |
| Country of residence | |
| | 50 |
| Where have you lived most of your life? | |
| | 22 |
| | 18 |
| | 6 |
| | 4 |
| Education level | |
| | 4 |
| | 14 |
| | 12 |
| | 12 |
| | 07 |
| | 1 |
| Do you consume dairy? | |
| | 48 |
| | 2 |
| Knowledge of dairy farming? | |
| | 3 |
| | 22 |
| | 25 |
| Confidence that dairy cattle generally have a good life? | |
| | 21 |
| | 15 |
| | 14 |
1 Farms other than dairy cattle farms.
Description, type and levels of demographic and response variables included in analysis of citizen responses before and after visiting the dairy farm.
| Variable | Description | Type | Variable levels |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Demographic | Categorical | |
| Age (yrs) | Demographic | Continuous | |
| Education | Demographic | Categorical | |
| Rural/urban status | Demographic | Categorical | |
| Self-reported knowledge | Subjective self-assessment of general knowledge of dairy husbandry | Categorical | |
| ‘Before’ quiz score | Objective score on the ‘before’ quiz on dairy husbandry | Continuous | |
| ‘Before’ confidence | ‘Before’ visit confidence about how good of a life dairy cattle have | Continuous | |
| FAW value expression | ‘Before’ response: was each animal welfare value criterion as determined from the qualitative analysis expressed? | Categorical | |
| FAW value range | ‘Before’ response: number of FAW value criteria referenced | Continuous | |
| Perception shift | ‘After’ response: Shift in individuals’ perception of the level of animal welfare after farm visit | Continuous |
Description of industry perception (IP) and FAW value themes and the percentage of participants referencing each theme before visiting the dairy farm.
| Theme | Participants (n = 50) | Theme description |
|---|---|---|
| IP (+) | ||
| 7 | Acknowledgement of the hard work of dairying and respect toward farmers | |
| 4 | Agrarian views of dairying as wholesome, idyllic and positive for family and community | |
| IP (ambiguous) | ||
| 29 | Associations of dairying with its end products (e.g. milk and ice cream) and references to wholesomeness and health | |
| 8 | Visceral, sensory responses to dairying, e.g. references to smells of the farm | |
| IP (-) | ||
| 7 | Mechanization and industrialization of dairying as harmful, particularly for animals | |
| 4 | Prioritization of economic goals over animal welfare | |
| 3 | Growth and size of dairy farms as bad for cows | |
| FAW values | ||
| 36 | Reference to feed and water (resources), physical health, hygiene, shelter | |
| 33 | Reference to allowing animals to lead natural lives, e.g. pasture and/or outdoor access, space, freedom, social and individual behaviors | |
| 11 | Reference to animals experiencing peace, quiet, happiness, and freedom from pain, discomfort and stress | |
| 28 | Reference to gentle treatment and attention to individual animals; routine management duties (e.g. regular milking) and good stockmanship; avoidance of abuse | |
| 11 | Concerns about administration of “drugs,” e.g. antibiotics and/or hormones | |
| 5 | References to end of life and short lifespan; killing of bull calves |
1 The sum of n does not equal 50 within each category as participants often referenced multiple themes, and some participants did not reference any themes within a category.
Fig 1Frequency of participants with correct responses on dairy husbandry quiz questions, before and after the dairy farm visit.
Milk Q = A dairy cow needs to have a calf to keep producing milk.
Tie stall Q = Dairy cows in British Columbia are routinely tied to their stall in the barn. Pasture Q = All dairy cows in British Columbia are allowed access to pasture.
Separation Q = How many days after birth does the dairy calf typically stay with its mom? Diet Q = Which best describes what most adult cows are typically fed on dairy farms?
Citizens' perceptions in response to the question, "Do dairy cattle have a good quality of life?" before and after visiting the dairy farm.
| Confident (14) | Nuanced (27) | Not confident (9) | ||
| Confident (21) | 10 | 2 | ||
| Neutral (15) | 1 | 4 | ||
| Not confident (14) | 4 | 7 | ||
1 ‘Before’ categories indicate confidence level (confident, neutral, not confident) of whether dairy cattle have good lives before visiting the farm. The ‘after’ visit category of ‘confident’ indicates participants with affirmative answers that dairy cattle had a good life on the farm with no expressed concerns; ‘nuanced’ indicates participants who mentioned concerns as well as positive attributes; and ‘not confident’ indicates participants with negative answers and no mentions of positive attributes. The bracketed numbers adjacent to or below possible response categories indicate the total participants within the respective row or column (out of 50). The number in each cell indicates the number of participants expressing each pair of perceptions before and after the farm visit. Cells outlined in bold (n = 22) indicate participants whose perceptions did not appear to shift in valence (no shift), the cells in the upper right (n = 16) indicate participants whose perceptions of the level of FAW became more negative (negative shift), and cells in the lower left (n = 12) indicate participants whose perceptions became more positive (positive shift).