| Literature DB >> 30473870 |
Nancy De Briyne1, Charlotte Berg2, Thomas Blaha3, Andreas Palzer4, Déborah Temple5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: European legislation dictates that pig tail docking is not allowed to be performed routinely (European Union. Council Directive 2008/120/EC of 18 December 2008 laying down minimum standards for the protection of pigs. OJ L 47, 18.2.2009). Nevertheless, tail docking is still practiced routinely in many European countries, while four countries stopped routine tail docking completely. Tail docking is also practiced in many countries outside Europe.The Federation of Veterinarians of Europe (FVE), the European Association of Porcine Health Management (EAPHM) together with the European Commission carried out an online survey to investigate the situation regarding the practice of pig tail docking and the provision of enrichment material across 24 European countries. It also focuses on the role of the veterinary profession and gives an overview on published literature regarding the challenges and possibilities related to the raising of pigs with intact tails.Entities:
Keywords: Animal welfare; Enrichment materials; Mutilations; Straw; Swine; Tail biting; Veterinarian
Year: 2018 PMID: 30473870 PMCID: PMC6238401 DOI: 10.1186/s40813-018-0103-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Porcine Health Manag ISSN: 2055-5660
Percentage of pigs tail docked and pigs provided suitable enrichment material (mean, max and min) in relation to the pig population in the 24 countries surveyed
| Country | Tail-docked | Enrichment material | Pig populationa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean % (range) | Mean % (range) | ||
| Austria (2) | 92.5 (90–95) | 60 (30–90) | 2792 |
| Belgium (7) | 97 (95–100) | 78 (10–100) | 6176 |
| Czech (1) | 90 | 60 | 1479 |
| Denmark (1) | 98 | 97 | 12,281 |
| Estonia (1) | 45 | 90 | 266 |
| Finland (2) | 1.5 (0–3) | 85 (72–98) | 1197 |
| France (5) | 95 (85–99) | 72 (10–99) | 12,793 |
| Germany (3) | 89 (80–99) | 95 (90–99) | 27,376 |
| Hungary (1) | 70 | 40 | 2907 |
| Italy (4) | 94.5 (90–100) | 44 (30–70) | 8477 |
| Ireland (2) | 97.5 (96–99) | 46 (16–76) | 1527 |
| Latvia (1) | 90 | 10 | 336 |
| Luxembourg (1) | 95 | 95 | 95 |
| Malta (1) | 56 | 45 | 41 |
| Netherlands (5) | 91.8 (88–97) | 52.4 (25–100) | 11,881 |
| Norway (1) | 0 | 60 | 1644 |
| Poland (2) | 95 | 55 (20–90) | 11,107 |
| Romania (2) | 100 (100) | 87.5 (75–100) | 4707 |
| Serbia (1) | 60 | 60 | 3200 |
| Slovakia (1) | 98 | 20 | 585 |
| Spain (5) | 94.6 (90–98) | 39.4 (5–100) | 29,231 |
| Sweden (4) | 0 | 97,25 (90–99) | 1471 |
| Switzerland (2) | 2.5 (0–5) | 90 (80–100) | 1442 |
| UK (2) | 84 (70–98) | 91.75 (89–100) | 4538 |
| Europe-24 total pig population | 77% (median = 95%) | 67% (median = 76%) | 147,549 |
aPig population (thousands of heads) Eurostat data 2016, Switzerland Knoema, Serbian statistical office
Frequencies of answers in the tail docked (TD) and no routinely tail docked groups (No-TD)
| No-TD (respondents from countries with no Tail Docking) | TD (respondents from countries with Tail Docking) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness of Commission Recommendations | |||
| Yes | 100% | 84% | |
| No | 0% | 16% | 0.22 |
| Awareness of Commission Staff Working Document | |||
| Yes | 100% | 65% | |
| No | 0% | 35% | 0.08 |
| Training for veterinary practitioners | |||
| Yes | 83% | 28% | |
| No | 17% | 72% |
|
| Animal welfare advisory group | |||
| Yes | 88% | 63% | |
| No | 12% | 37% | 0.13 |
| Role of veterinary practitioners | |||
| Very important/Important | 100% | 66% | |
| Low involvement or importance | 0% | 34% |
|
| Policy for veterinary certificates | |||
| Yes | 38% | 37% | |
| No | 62% | 63% | 0.87 |
| Recording of tail biting at the slaughterhouse | |||
| Yes | 100% | 45% | |
| No | 0% | 55% |
|
| Effectivity of national initiatives | |||
| Very effective/Effective | 80% | 3% | |
| Not very effective/not effective | 20% | 97% |
|
P-value in bold means a p-value of < 0.05 which was considered significant
Fig 1.Most important practices suggested by veterinarians to prevent tail biting
Fig 2.Main challenges to stop tail docking
Non exhaustive list of countries having stricter legislation then the EU Directive in relation to tail docking
| Country | Legislation stricter than EU Directive |
|---|---|
| Denmark | Stricter legislation regarding rooting material, cooling, solid/drained floors and hospital pens, tail should be docked as little as possible (not more than ½ of the tail), if performed after the 4th day of life, piglets should be given long-lasting analgesia |
| Estonia | Veterinarian has to make the decision |
| Finland | Tail docking is forbidden since 2003, lower legal stocking densities |
| Germany | It is only allowed to tail-dock piglets up to an age of 4 days. If older, it has to be done by a veterinarian with anaesthesia (§5 TierSchutzGesetz). Since 2018, also stricter requirements apply regarding enrichment materials and a guidance to cut maximum 1/3 of the tail |
| Norway | Amputation of tails for medical reasons can only be performed by veterinarians Regulation for Housing of Swine of 2003, using anaesthesia and prolonged analgesia. As a consequence, it is not carried out any more Paragraph 10 |
| Sweden | Tail docking is not allowed (SFS 1988:534 Paragraphs 2,4,10) |
| Switzerland | Removed from the list of mutilations that can be performed without anesthesia Animal Protection Ordinance, 2001 |
Fig 3.Percentage of docked pigs in 2007 (EFSA) and 2017 (our study)