| Literature DB >> 29976913 |
Marina Salas1, Xavier Manteca2, Teresa Abáigar3, Maria Delclaux4, Conrad Enseñat5, Eva Martínez-Nevado6, Miguel Ángel Quevedo7, Hugo Fernández-Bellon8.
Abstract
There is a lack of protocols specifically developed for the assessment of welfare of wild animals in captivity, even when it is known that providing good standards of welfare is important. The aim of this study was the development and the application of a protocol for the assessment of welfare in captive dorcas gazelles. The protocol was mainly developed taking into account the protocol for the assessment of welfare in cattle from the Welfare Quality® project, the available literature of the biology of this species and the Husbandry Guidelines developed for captive breeding and management of this species. The protocol was specifically developed for dorcas gazelles and included four principles, 10 criteria and 23 animal and environmental-based indicators. To test its utility, this protocol was applied to five different groups of gazelles from three different zoos. Its application made possible to detect areas for improvement in all groups assessed.Entities:
Keywords: behaviour; captivity; dorcas gazelle; enclosure; protocol; welfare; zoo
Year: 2018 PMID: 29976913 PMCID: PMC6071001 DOI: 10.3390/ani8070111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Principles, criteria and indicators of the protocol to assess welfare in captive dorcas gazelles. There are 10 animal-based indicators (indicated by ‘*’) and 13 resource or management-based indicators.
| Principles | Criteria | Indicators |
|---|---|---|
| Good Feeding |
Absence of prolonged hunger |
Body condition * |
|
Absence of prolonged thirst |
Number of water points Availability of water Cleanliness of the water points | |
| Good Housing |
Thermal comfort |
Availability of shade Availability of shelter |
|
Ease of movement |
Enclosure size (area) Square meters available per animal | |
| Good Health |
Absence of injuries |
1 Lameness * Integument alterations * |
|
Absence of disease |
Nasal discharge * Ocular discharge * Hampered respiration * Diarrhoea * | |
| Appropriate Behaviour |
Expression of social behaviours |
Affiliative behaviour * Intra-specific aggression * |
|
Group size |
Number of gazelles Composition of the group Number of animals of other species | |
|
Expression of other behaviours |
Stereotypies * Environmental enrichment program | |
|
Good human-animal relationship |
Medical training program Capture, immobilization and handling |
Description of the social behaviours that are included in the welfare protocol for dorcas gazelles.
| Affiliative behaviour |
|
|
| Social grooming | The animal brushes with its muzzle any part of the body of another group mate except for the anal region or the prepuce. If the animal stops brushing the receiver for more than 10 s and then starts brushing the same receiver again, this is recorded as a new bout. It is also taken as a new bout if the actor starts brushing another receiver or if there is a role reversal between actor and receiver. | |
| Social smelling | The animal smells any part of the body of another group mate except for the anal region or the prepuce. If the animal stops smelling for more than 10 s and then starts smelling the same receiver again, this is recorded as a new bout. It is also taken as a new bout if the actor starts smelling another receiver or if there is a role reversal between actor and receiver. | |
| Horning | Head play with physical contact of two animals. The animals rub foreheads, horn bases or horns against the head or neck of one another without obvious agonistic intention. Neither of the opponents takes advantage of the situation in order to become victorious. It is taken as a new bout if the same animals start horning after 10 s or more, or if the horning partner changes. | |
| Aggressive behaviour | Displacement with physical contact | Interaction where the actor is butting, hitting, thrusting, striking, pushing or penetrating the receiver with forehead, horns, horn base or any other part of the body with a forceful movement resulting in the receiver giving up its position. |
| Displacement without physical contact | The actor threatens or interacts with the receiver without making any physical contact resulting in the receiver giving up its position. | |
| Chasing | The actor makes an animal flee or give up its current position by following fast or running behind it, sometimes with additional threats like jerky head movements. Chasing is recorded even if it is not followed by an interaction with physical contact. | |
| Fighting | Two contestants vigorously push their heads (foreheads, horn bases and/or horns) against each other while planting their feet on the ground, both exerting force against each other. A new bout starts if the same animals restart fighting after more than 10 s or if the fighting partner changes. |
Enclosure size (area) and space per animal available in each group of dorcas gazelle assessed.
| Group | Number of Animals | Enclosure Size (Area) (m2) | Space per Animal (m2/Animal) |
|---|---|---|---|
| F | 17 | 728 | 43 |
| FY | 10 | 1143 | 88 |
| M1 | 7 | 1117 | 93 |
| M2 | 3 | 1143 | 229 |
| M3 | 5 | 1287 | 184 |
Figure 1Percentage of aggressive and affiliative behaviours out of the total number of social interactions recorded for each group of dorcas gazelles studied (n = 42). The five groups assessed are named F (for ‘female group,’ n = 17), FY (for ‘female and young group’, n = 10) M1 (for ‘male group 1,’ n = 7), M2 (n = 3) and M3 (n = 5).