| Literature DB >> 29316704 |
Carolina Munoz1, Angus Campbell2, Stuart Barber3, Paul Hemsworth4, Rebecca Doyle5.
Abstract
This study examined variation in the welfare of extensively managed ewes and potential welfare risks. A total of 100 Merino ewes (aged 2-4 years) were individually identified and examined at three key stages: pregnancy, lactation and weaning. Eight animal-based welfare measures were used to assess welfare: flight distance, body condition score (BCS), fleece condition, skin lesions, tail length, dag score, lameness and mastitis. Data were analysed by ANOVA and McNemar's statistics. Overall, the average BCS of the group was in agreement with industry recommendations. However, a number of animals were classified with inadequate condition (either too thin or too fat) across the three observation periods. The presence of heavy dags was greatest at mid-lactation (87%, P < 0.0001), lameness was greatest at weaning (14%, P = 0.01), clinical mastitis was 1% annually, and five ewes were lost from the study. Ewes had better health at mid-pregnancy compared to mid-lactation and weaning. The main welfare issues identified were under and over feeding, ewe mortality, lameness, ecto-parasites (flystrike) and mastitis, all of which have the potential to be reduced with improved management practices. Future welfare assessment programs must consider that significant variation in on-farm welfare will occur in extensively managed systems and this needs to be accounted for when evaluating farms.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; animal-based indicators; on-farm welfare assessment; sheep
Year: 2018 PMID: 29316704 PMCID: PMC5789303 DOI: 10.3390/ani8010008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Animal-based welfare measures identified for extensively managed ewes.
| Five Domains Principles | Category | Indicator | Animals | Validity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nutrition | Body condition score | Lambs/ewes | H | [ | |
| Feed and water | Rumen fill | Lambs/ewes | L/M | [ | |
| Shade and shelter | Panting | Ewes | H | [ | |
| Fleece cleanliness | Ewes | H | [ | ||
| Gastrointestinal health | Faecal soiling | Ewes | H | [ | |
| Integument alterations | Fleece condition | Ewes | H | [ | |
| Skin lesions | Ewes | H | [ | ||
| Foot condition and lameness | Foot-wall integrity | Ewes | L/M | [ | |
| Hoof overgrowth | Ewes | M | [ | ||
| Gait score | Ewes | M/H | [ | ||
| Reproductive health | Mastitis | Ewes | M/H | [ | |
| Tail length | Lambs/ewes | H | [ | ||
| Systemic disease | Social withdrawal | Ewes | M | [ | |
| Agonistic behaviour | Aggression | Ewes | M | [ | |
| Abnormal behaviour | Stereotypies | Ewes | H | [ | |
| Behaviour | QBA * | Wethers/ewes | M/H | [ | |
| HAR # | Flight distance | Lambs/ewes | L/M | [ |
* QBA refers to Qualitative Behaviour Assessment; # HAR refers to human-animal relationships. Validity scale was as follows: H = high, M = moderate and L = low. High validity was given to animal-based measures validated in previous research, medium validity was given to measures without a reliable method of assessment and low validity was given to measures that have been suggested in scientific literature but without evidence that they assess welfare.
Animal-based welfare measures used to assess the welfare of extensively managed ewes.
| Welfare Measure | Assessment Criteria |
|---|---|
| Flight distance | Flight distance was estimated by counting the steps between the observers’ hand and the ewes’ head at the moment of withdrawal [ |
| Body condition score | Scored on a 5 point scale from 1 (thin) to 5 (obese), using a quarter-unit precision. Sheep were assessed by palpation of the backbone, muscle and short ribs [ |
| Fleece condition | Scored on a 3 point scale: (0) good fleece condition, when parted, the fleece has no lumpiness or signs of ectoparasites; (1) some fleece loss, small shed or bald patches of no more than 10 cm diameter. When parted, the fleece may have some lumpiness or scurf, little evidence of ectoparasites; and (2) significant fleece loss with bald patches of greater than 10 cm in diameter, clear evidence of ectoparasites [ |
| Skin lesions | Assessed by recording number, location, type and size of the skin lesions. Lesions were classified as cuts, open wounds, old wounds or scars and abscesses. |
| Tail length | Scored on a 2 point scale: (0) the tip of the vulva is covered by the tail when held down; (1) the tail is over-shortened or almost not present, or if the vulva and anus cannot be covered [ |
| Dag score | Scored on a 6 point scale: (0) no evidence of faecal soiling; (1) very light soiling on the breech area; (2) Moderate dag on the breech area extending ventrally; (3) Severe dag predominantly on the breech area, extending ventrally and dorsally over the tail some soiling and dag around anus; (4) excessive dag on the breech area and on the hind legs; (5) Very severe dag on the breech area and on the hind legs or below the level of the hocks [ |
| Lameness | Scored on a 4 point scale: (0) not lame; (1) clear shortening of stride with obvious head nodding or flicking as the affected limb touches the floor; (2) clear shortening of stride with obvious head nodding and not weight-bearing on affected limb whilst moving; (3) reluctant to stand or move [ |
| Mastitis | Scored on a 5 point scale: (0) normal udder; (1) a small fibrotic lesion within the mammary tissue, normal secretion; (2) A more extensive fibrosis of the udder. Milk ranged from normal to purulent; (3) Extensive swelling of the udder, that could be abscessed or ruptured; (4) Peracure mastitis. Complete udder involvement with severe inflammation. Secretion from serum-like to purulent. Mammary lymph nodes enlarged. Body temperature elevated [ |
Mean, minimum and maximum scores, recommended values (RV), percentage of ewes identified within recommended values (% within RV) and above recommended values (% above RV) at mid-pregnancy, mid-lactation and weaning; standard deviation in parentheses.
| Measures | Mean Score | Min | Max | RV | % within RV | % above RV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-pregnancy | ||||||
| BCS | 2.83 (0.45) * | 2 | 3.75 | 2.7–3.3 # | 60% | 11% |
| Fleece condition | 0.02 (0.14) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 98% | 2% |
| Skin lesions | 0.00 (0.14) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 99% | 1% |
| Dag score | 0.54 (0.76) | 0 | 3 | 0–1 a | 99% | 1% |
| Lameness | 0.06 (0.27) | 0 | 2 | 0 a | 95% | 5% |
| Mid-lactation | ||||||
| BCS | 3.11 (0.42) * | 2.5 | 4 | 2.7–3 # | 42% | 48% |
| Fleece condition | 0.03 (0.17) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 97% | 3% |
| Skin lesions | 0.01 (0.08) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 92% | 8% |
| Dag score | 3.94 (0.89) | 1 | 5 | 0–1 a | 13% | 87% |
| Lameness | 0.06 (0.28) | 0 | 2 | 0 a | 95% | 5% |
| Clinical mastitis | 0.00 (0.00) | 0 | 0 | 0 a | 100% | 0% |
| Weaning | ||||||
| BCS | 2.88 (0.52) * | 1.5 | 3.75 | 2.5–3 # | 54% | 34% |
| Fleece condition | 0.09 (0.39) | 0 | 2 | 0 a | 95% | 5% |
| Skin lesions | 0.07 (0.27) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 93% | 7% |
| Dag score | 0.94 (0.25) | 0 | 3 | 0–1 a | 98% | 2% |
| Lameness | 0.13 (0.35) | 0 | 1 | 0 a | 86% | 14% |
| Clinical mastitis | 0.06 (0.49) | 0 | 4 | 0 a | 99% | 1% |
* Mean BCS of ‘reproductively active’ ewes; # Industry recommendations of BCS [57]; a Score recommended by [22].
Figure 1Median, minimum and maximum flight distance (FD) observed at mid-pregnancy, mid-lactation and weaning. Different letters indicate statistical difference (P < 0.05).