| Literature DB >> 30463178 |
Celine Kongsli Heimberg1, Anna Jespersen2, Randi Oppermann Moe3.
Abstract
The occurrence of wounds in different anatomical regions, such as tail tip lesions, is an important welfare concern in farmed mink. This study investigated whether mechanical factors attributed to cage design in multilevel cages may be involved in the etiology of tail tip lesions. Specifically, effects of an additional hammock intended to reduce speed during transitions between cage levels and thereby assumed to lower the incidence and severity of tails hitting the wire mesh were investigated. Three mink farms and a total of 600 mink participated in the study. On each farm, brown female mink (n = 100) were either housed in multilevel cages equipped with plastic hammocks (placed either perpendicular or parallel to the sidewalls) or in standard multilevel cages without hammocks (n = 100). The study was conducted from December to March using singly housed females. Significant differences in the number of tail tip wounds were found between groups with a hammock installed in the cage vs. control groups in two of the farms (p = 0.029 and p = 0.031), with more wounds developing in cages without a hammock. Furthermore, there was a trend towards difference in the number of tail tip wounds in groups with hammocks installed perpendicular vs. groups with hammocks installed parallel to the cage sidewalls, but a potential farm effect cannot be ruled out. This study is the first to suggest that mechanical factors associated with cage design may play a role in the etiology of tail tip lesions in farmed mink. Further studies are needed to understand the causal relationship between cage design and tail tip lesions in mink.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; farmed mink; multilevel cages; tail tip lesions; wounds
Year: 2018 PMID: 30463178 PMCID: PMC6262326 DOI: 10.3390/ani8110214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Standard multilevel mink cage (control), view from the left side. The arrow indicates the chosen route of the mink from the upper floor to the nest box.
Figure 2(a) Multilevel cage with a hammock installed perpendicular to the sidewalls, view from the left side. The arrows indicate the chosen route of the mink from the upper floor to the nest box. (b) Front view of a hammock placed perpendicular to the sidewalls.
Figure 3(a) Multilevel cage with a hammock installed parallel to the sidewalls, view from the left side. The arrows indicate the chosen route of the mink from the upper floor to the nest box. (b) Front view of a hammock placed parallel to the sidewalls.
Number of developed tail tip lesions per group on Farms 1–3. The scoring is according to the WelFur protocol [2].
| WelFur Wound Scoring | Group | 0 | 1 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Farm 1 | With hammock | 100 | 0 | 0.029 |
| Control group | 94 | 6 | ||
| Farm 2 | With hammock | 100 | 0 | 0.059 |
| Control group | 95 | 5 | ||
| Farm 3 | With hammock * | 93 | 7 | 0.031 |
| Control group | 82 | 12 ** |
* Hammock installed parallel to sidewalls, not perpendicular as Farms 1 and 2; ** Farm 3 had six mink with score two in the control group.
Figure 4Typical morphology of a wound probably caused by tail hitting the wire mesh, located on the ventral side of the mink tail.