| Literature DB >> 31681807 |
Francesca Dai1, Alessandro Dalla Costa2, Lebana Bonfanti2, Claudia Caucci2, Guido Di Martino2, Roberta Lucarelli2, Barbara Padalino3, Michela Minero1.
Abstract
The present work aimed to evaluate the efficacy of a self-loading training using positive reinforcement on stress-related behaviors shown by meat horses during loading procedures into a truck. Thirty-two meat horses (M = 18; F = 14; 6 month-old) were included in the study. All horses had limited interactions with the farmer and were not used to be restrained nor lead by halter. Horses were divided in two groups: Control Group (C; N = 14) and Training Group (T; N = 18). T horses were trained to self-load: in order to teach the horses to enter into the truck, a targeting training technique throughout a shaping process was applied. Training sessions were performed three times a week, from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., for 6 weeks; training was then repeated once a week to maintain the memory until the transport toward a slaughterhouse. The loading phase was video-recorded and loading time was directly recorded using a stopwatch. All horses were transported to the same slaughterhouse in 14 different days using the same truck. Behavior was subsequently analyzed with a focal animal continuous recording method. Loading time was shorter in T horses (mean ± SD = 44.44 ± 47.58 s) than in C horses (mean ± SD = 463.09 ± 918.19 s) (T-test; p = 0.019). T horses showed more forward locomotion toward the truck than C horses (T-test; p = 0.029). Our preliminary findings suggest that self-loading training may be useful to mitigate loading-related stress in meat horses, minimally socialized with humans.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; horse; training; transport; welfare
Year: 2019 PMID: 31681807 PMCID: PMC6802606 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Ethogram for the evaluation of horse behavior during loading [modified from (10)].
| Forward walk | The horse walks toward the trailer |
| Forward trot | The horse trots toward the trailer |
| Forward gallop | The horse gallops toward the trailer |
| Backwards | The horse moves away from the trailer |
| Standing | The horse stands on the four legs |
| Turn back | The horse tries to turn all its body in the opposite direction of the trailer |
| Still | The horse stops moving, digging in its heels, refusing to proceed |
| Rear | The horse rears with its front legs |
| Kick | The horse kicks, one or two legs is lifted and moved rapidly and forcefully |
| Mount | The horse mounts the horse in front of him/her |
| Paw | The horse rises a foreleg and scrapes the floor |
| Sniffing | The horse sniffs the ground |
| Defecate | The horse drops manure |
| Urinate | The horse drops urines |
| Other | Any other behavior |
High frequencies of forward locomotion behaviors were considered to be associated to low stress.
High frequencies of these behaviors were considered to be stress-related.
Figure 1Boxplots reporting data distribution of: (A) time needed to load in Training Group (T) and Control Group (C); (B) Percentage of time spent walking and trotting in Training Group (T) and Control Group (C). The band inside the box represent the median; the whiskers represents the lowest datum still within 1.5 interquartile range of the lower quartile, and the highest datum still within 1.5 interquartile range of the upper quartile; mild outliers are presented as °, while extreme outliers as *.