| Literature DB >> 31533328 |
Belinda Vigors1, Alistair Lawrence2,3.
Abstract
To support the furtherance of positive animal welfare, there is a need to develop meaningful and practical positive welfare indicators for on-farm welfare assessment. Considering the perspectives of farmers is arguably critical in this regard. Doing so helps ensure positive welfare indicators reflect farmers' existing welfare norms and attitudes and, are thus, of practical relevance to them. However, a key issue for such development is the dearth of knowledge on farmers' perspectives of positive welfare. To address this, this study uses qualitative interviews to directly examine livestock farmers' perspectives of positive welfare. Findings reveal that farmers describe elements of positive welfare which are broadly in line with indicators suggested in the positive welfare literature. These elements include animal autonomy, play, positive affect, positive human-animal relationships, social interaction, and appropriate genetic selection. Additionally, this study finds that farmers construct the reduction of negative aspects of welfare as their primary management concern and mostly construct positive welfare as arising indirectly from this. Insights into the importance that farmers of different sectors and systems give to different aspects of positive welfare indicators are also explored. The implications of these findings and the similitudes between farmers' perspectives and the positive welfare literature are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: farmer attitudes; farmer knowledge; free elicitation narrative interviewing; positive animal welfare; positive animal welfare indicators; qualitative research
Year: 2019 PMID: 31533328 PMCID: PMC6770310 DOI: 10.3390/ani9090694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Format of narrative interviews with example of follow-up prompt questions.
| Narrative-Inducing Question | Main Narration | Questioning Phase (Examples of Follow-up Prompts) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Can you tell me about what, in your experience, is a good life for a farm animal? | Active listening—noting further prompting questions |
You mentioned you want them to be ‘happy and content’; how would you know that your animals are happy and content? When you say ‘keeping them properly’ can you give me some examples of what this involves? When you say, they are able to ‘play with their mates’ can you tell me how you manage this? You mentioned ‘giving the cow her choice’, can you describe to me how you would do this? You said that you wanted your animals to be outdoors; from an animal’s point of view, what makes this a good life? |
| 2. Positive animal welfare—can you tell me about what comes to mind when you hear that? |
Can you describe what you mean when you say going above and beyond; what does that involve? You describe it as going beyond just the basics; can you give me some examples of what these may be? You mentioned ‘positive environment’; can you give some examples of what you mean by this? When you say ‘something which is good and kind to the animal’ can you give some examples of what being good and kind involves? | |
| 3. Can you describe what motivates you to farm the way you do? |
You mentioned seeing things in the past that you didn’t like, can you describe to me how this influences how you do things now? So, what is it about working directly with the animals that you find enjoyable? Could you perhaps describe some of the specific steps you took in that process, so how you designed your way of farming? |
Farmers’ demographic information.
| Sector | Gender | Age | Farm Size (Ha) | Number of Animals | System |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| 1 | Male | 30–40 | 130 | 100–200 | Pasture |
| 2 | Male | 50–60 | 137 | 200–300 | Pasture |
| 3 | Male | 18–30 | 62 | 100–200 | Pasture |
| 4 | Male | 30–40 | 343 | 700–800 | Zero-grazed |
| 5 | Male | 50–60 | 283 | 100–200 | Pasture |
| 6 | Male | 30–40 | 160 | 300–400 | Pasture and robotic milking |
| 7 | Male | 40–50 | 344 | 300–400 | Pasture and zero-grazed, non-robotic and robotic milking |
| 8 | Male | 30–40 | 100 | 100–200 | Zero-grazed |
| 9 | Female | 18–30 | 307 | 300–400 | Zero-grazed |
| 10 | Male | 40–50 | 776 | 1000–1500 | Outdoor 365 days/year |
| 11 | Female | 30–40 | 687 | 400–500 | Pasture and zero-grazed |
| 12 | Male | 40–50 | 176 | 100–200 | Organic and robotic milking |
| 13 | Male | 40–50 | 283 | 800–1000 | Zero-grazed |
|
| |||||
| 1 | Male | 60–70 | 178 | 600–700 | Indoor-wintered |
| 2 | Male | 40–50 | 438 | 200–300 | Indoor-wintered |
| 3 | Male | 30–40 | 95 | 200–300 | Outdoor-wintered |
| 4 | Male | 50–60 | 230 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
| 5 | Female | 30–40 | 4 | <100 | Indoor-wintered |
| 6 | Male | 50–60 | 100 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
| 7 | Male | 40–50 | 1011 | 200–300 | Indoor-wintered |
| 8 | Male | 60–70 | 60 | 400–500 | Outdoor-wintered |
| 9 | Male | 40–50 | 500 | 1000–1500 | Outdoor-wintered & Indoor-wintered |
| 10 | Prefer not to say | 40–50 | 750 | 1000–1500 | Indoor-wintered |
|
| |||||
| 1 | Male | 30–40 | 141 | 10,000–15,000 | Free range and organic |
| 2 | Male | 50–60 | 95 | 120,000–130,000 | Free range |
|
| |||||
| 1 | Male | 40–50 | 54 | 200–300 | Free range (pig and poultry), organic (all species), indoor-wintered (beef), outdoor-wintered (sheep) |
| 2 | Male | 30–40 | 230 | 1000–1500 | Free range (poultry), straw-housed (pig), outdoor-wintered (sheep) |
|
| |||||
| 1 | Male | 30–40 | 555 | 2000–3000 | Housed (slats and straw) |