| Literature DB >> 31921919 |
Céline Tallet1, Marine Rakotomahandry1, Sabine Herlemont1, Armelle Prunier1.
Abstract
Tail docking is widely performed in pig farms to prevent tail biting. We investigated the consequences of this practice on behavioral indicators of pain and stress, and on the human-piglet relationship during lactation. Within 19 litters, piglets (1-3 days of age) were submitted on day 0 (D0) to docking with a cautery iron (D), sham-docking (S), or no docking (U). Piglets from the D and S groups were observed during the procedure (body movements and vocalizations) and just after, in isolation, during 20 s for body, tail and ear postures as well as ear movements. Piglets from the three treatments were observed in their home pen after docking on D0 and D3 afternoon for body posture, tail posture and movements. Piglets from the D and U groups were observed on D6, D12, D19, and D26 in their home pen for oral behavior, body, and tail posture. Tail damage and tear staining were scored on D5, D11, D18, and D25. A 5-min motionless human test was performed on D14. During the procedure, D piglets screamed more and with a higher intensity (P < 0.05) than S piglets (n = 48-50). Just after docking, D piglets held their ears in a posture perpendicular to the head-tail axis and changed their ear posture more often (P < 0.05). Between D6 and D26, D piglets kept their tail immobile (P < 0.001) and in a horizontal position (P < 0.01) more often than U piglets (n = 45-47). Between D11 and D25, U piglets had higher scores for tail damage and damage freshness than D piglets (0.09 < P < 0.02) whereas tear-stain score was similar. In the human test, D piglets interacted later with an unfamiliar human than U piglets (P = 0.01, n = 18/group). Present data indicate signs of acute pain and stress in piglets due to docking during the procedure itself and adverse consequences throughout lactation thereafter, including on their relationship with humans. On the other hand, the presence of tail lesions shows that undocked piglets are subject to more tail biting, even before weaning.Entities:
Keywords: ear posture; lactation; tail posture; vocalization; welfare
Year: 2019 PMID: 31921919 PMCID: PMC6917581 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Design of the experiment (U, undocked pigs; S, sham-docked pigs; D, docked pigs; M, males; F, females).
| −1, −2 | Birth | No | No | 19 | |||
| 0 | Sham/tail docking | 1 | Husbandry table | No | 27M + 23F | 48F | 19 |
| 0 | No | 2 | Isolated in a cart | No | 27M + 23F | 48F | 19 |
| 0, 3 | No | 3 | Home pen | 37F | 17M + 22F | 36F | 19 |
| 4 | Iron injection and tattoo | No | All | All | All | 19 | |
| 4 | Tail docking | No | No | No | All | No | 19 |
| 6, 12, 19, 26 | No | 4 | Home pen | 47F | No | 45F | 19 |
| 14 | No | Human test | Test pen | 18F | No | 18F | 18 |
| 28 | Weaning | No | No | All | All | All | 19 |
Ethogram used to describe the behavioral consequences of treatments (tail docking, sham docking, and no handling/docking) in piglets.
| Grunt | Low-pitched vocalization ( |
| Squeal | High-pitched vocalization with stable frequency ( |
| Scream | High-pitched and frequency modulated vocalizations ( |
| Amplitude | Maximum sound level during the procedure (dB). |
| Relaxed body | Piglet with the body relaxed, almost motionless |
| Body stiffening | Piglet tense and immobile, without twisting of the spinal column |
| Body twisting | Piglet tense and immobile with the spinal column twisted to one side. Twisting includes transitory and very brief stiffening |
| Forelegs movements | Movements of the forelegs as if walking (pedaling in the air) |
| Sitting | Piglet on its rump legs with the forelegs on the floor |
| Lying | Piglet lying down |
| Standing | Piglet on its four legs |
| Squatting | Hindquarters lower than the horizontal line of the body, with the rear legs bent and not touching the floor. |
| Immobile | Immobile tail, without visible movement |
| Moving | Visible movements |
| High | Higher than horizontal line |
| Horizontal | Horizontal line of the head-tail axis |
| Low to tucked | Lower than the horizontal line, or against the body or between the legs of the piglet. |
| Backwards | Ear directed backwards |
| Perpendicular | Ear perpendicular to the head-tail axis |
| Forwards | Ear directed forwards |
| Movement | Each change of posture was considered as a movement. |
| Directed to the tail | Including sniffing (contact between the snout and the tail), mouthing (taking the tail in the mouth), chewing (mouthing with movement of the jaw), biting (mouthing with a brief movement of the jaw) the tail |
| Directed to any other part of the body | Including sniffing, mouthing, chewing, and biting directed to the ears, the belly or any other part of the body |
| No reaction to oral activities | The target piglet continues its activity or inactivity |
| Reaction to oral activities | The target piglet changes activity by jumping, avoiding, escaping, being aggressive or vocalizing, <3 s after the start of the oral activity. |
This was scored at docking or sham docking.
This was scored for 20 s after docking or sham docking.
This was scored the afternoon after docking (D0) and 3 days later (D3).
This was scored once a week till weaning.
Recorded with a sound level meter (Extech Instruments Co, USA).
Description of the various categories used for tail scoring.
| 1 | Intact | No damage. The skin of the tail has no marks or injuries | |
| 2 | Swollen tail or bite marks | The tail is swollen with a red coloring or has small injuries from bites which are visible as spots/dots on the tail | |
| 3 | Open wound | The tail has one or more open wounds with puncture(s) of the skin and removal of tissue | |
| 4 | Swollen and open wound | The tail is swollen and has one or more open wounds with puncture(s) of the skin and removal of tissue | |
| 1 | No blood | No blood visible on the tail | |
| 2 | Dry black blood, scar | Dried blood, which is dark brown or black, is visible on the tail | |
| 3 | Dark red/brown | Somewhat dried blood is visible on the tail. It looks red to brown and feels somewhat sticky, or wet. The tail may, or may not, have a wound crust | |
| 4 | Red fresh blood | The tail shows fresh red blood. It feels wet due to bleeding, or exudate. The tail may or may not have a wound crust | |
This scoring system was developed within the FareWellDock project, and adapted from a previous experiment (.
Descriptive scale used for evaluation of tear-stain scores.
| 0 | No signs of any staining |
| 1 | Staining is barely detectable and area stained does not extend below the eyelid |
| 2 | Staining is obvious and area stained is ~ <50% of total eye area |
| 3 | Staining is obvious and area stained is ~50–100% of total eye area |
| 4 | Staining is severe, area stained is ~≥100% of total eye area, and area stained does not extend below the mouth line |
| 5 | Staining is severe, area stained is >100% of total eye area, and area stained extends below the mouth line |
This scoring system was developed previously (.
Behavioral reactions to docking (D, n = 48) and sham-docking (S, n = 50).
| Screaming | 45 | 3 | <0.001 | |
| Grunting | 7 | 24 | <0.001 | |
| Squealing | 10 | 17 | 0.18 | |
| Vocalizing | 48 | 34 | <0.001 | |
| Relaxed body | 0 | 28 | <0.001 | |
| Body stiffening | 20 | 22 | 0.84 | |
| Body twisting | 36 | 4 | <0.001 | |
| Forelegs movements | 48 | 17 | <0.001 | |
| ∙ With twisting | 36 | 4 | <0.001 | |
| ∙ Without twisting | 12 | 13 | 1 | |
| Number of vocalizations | 3 (2–4) | 2 (1–3) | 1.181 | <0.001 |
| Sound level (dB) | 97 (89–103) | 68 (61–73) | 2.121 | <0.001 |
Calculated on the animals vocalizing (i.e., 48 D and 34 S).
Figure 1Box plot (medians and quartiles) representations of observations of the immobility of the tail at different periods for Docked, Sham-Docked, and Undocked piglets. (A) Time spent with the tail immobile during 20 s of observation just after docking (n = 48 D and 50 S: *P < 0.05). (B) Proportion of observations with the tail immobile on the afternoon after docking (D0) and 3 days later (D3) (n = 36 D, 39 S, and 37 U, a,b: P < 0.05). (C) Proportion of observations with the tail immobile for 6 scan samplings conducted over the last 3 weeks of lactation (2 scans per week) (n = 45 D and 47 U, ***P < 0.001).
Figure 2Proportions (%) of Docked (n = 48) and Sham-docked (n = 50) animals observed with their ears forward, perpendicular or backward, and observed changing their ear posture during the 20 s of observations just after docking or sham-docking. ***P < 0.001.
Figure 3Box plot (medians and quartiles) representations of observations of the posture of the tail of Docked (n = 45) and Undocked (n = 47) piglets obtained from six scan samplings during lactation with 19 l/group; statistics are based on within litter differences. **P < 0.01.
Tail damage and tear-stain scores in Docked and Undocked pigs.
| Number of animals with a maximum score of tail damage above 1 (and %) | 2 (4.6) | 8 (18.6) | 0.04 |
| Number of animals with a maximum score of damage freshness above 1 (and %) | 2 (4.6) | 7 (16.3) | 0.07 |
| Number of animals with a tear-stain score on one side above 1 (and %) | 41 (95.3) | 39 (90.7) | 0.39 |
Scores are combined for the four series of observations (Days 5, 11, 18, and 25).
Figure 4Box plot (medians and quartiles) representations of the behavior of Docked (n = 18) and Undocked (n = 18) piglets during the motionless human test. (A) latency (s) to contact the human, (B) time spent (s) in contact with the human, (C) number of grunts emitted, (D) number of high-pitched calls emitted. *P < 0.05.