| Literature DB >> 33282931 |
Jen-Yun Chou1,2,3, Dale A Sandercock2, Rick B D'Eath2, Keelin O'Driscoll1.
Abstract
One of the difficulties in complying with the prohibition of routine tail docking is a lack of effective alternative solutions to prevent tail biting, especially in fully slatted systems. This study compared three slat-compatible enrichment replenishment strategies for pigs. Forty-eight mixed-sex pens (six males and six females/pen) of undocked pigs were followed from birth to slaughter. Pre-weaning, half the pigs were provided with enrichment materials (a cardboard cup, rubber toy, hessian cloth and bamboo), in addition to a rope for the sows, in all farrowing crates. Post-weaning, all pens were enriched with eight identical items, including an elevated rack supplied with fresh-cut grass, and objects of wooden, bamboo, rubber, and fabric materials presented in various ways. However, three different replenishment frequencies were applied: "Low" (replenished on Monday/Wednesday/Friday), "Medium" (replenished once daily), and "High" (replenished ad libitum). Individual pigs were weighed on days 0, 49, 91, and 113 post-weaning. Direct behavior observations were conducted twice weekly at pen level (10 min/day/pen), and tail and ear lesion scores of individual pigs were also recorded every other week. These measurements were taken during the post-weaning period. The cost of all enrichment materials used was calculated. Pre-weaning enrichment only contributed to a lower ear lesion score (P = 0.04). No difference in lesion scores was found between post-weaning treatments. "Low" replenishment rate pigs performed more damaging behaviors (tail/ear biting, belly-nosing, mounting, other biting, and aggressive behaviors combined) than "High" and "Medium" pigs (P < 0.01). The average daily gain in the finishing stage was higher in "High" than "Low" pigs (P < 0.05). Although sporadic tail biting occurred, only 0.69% of the pigs had their tails bitten severely enough that they became shorter than half of a normal undocked tail. The average enrichment cost for the post-weaning period was <€2 per pig. In conclusion, the high enrichment replenishment rate increased growth and reduced damaging behaviors compared to the low replenishment rate pigs. Overall, these findings show that the provision and regular replenishment of multiple, slat-compatible, enrichment sources can reduce tail damage to manageable levels without the need for tail docking.Entities:
Keywords: grass; growing-finishing pigs; harmful behaviors; pig production; point-source enrichment; tail biting; tail docking
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282931 PMCID: PMC7691579 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2020.584706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
List of enrichment items provided for all pigs during the weaner and finisher stage.
| 2 × Easyfix® Luna 117 | Shape as a sphere in the middle with a diameter of 0.12 m and 12 legs (each around 0.12 m long) | Loose on the floor |
| Spruce ( | 1.2 m × 0.05 m × 0.04 m | Placed in a dispenser on the wall (the bottom end touching the floor) |
| Pine ( | 0.2 m × 0.05 m × 0.05 m | Suspended on a chain |
| Fresh-cut grass | N/A | Loose in an elevated rack |
| Cardboard tube | Length around 0.33 m with a diameter around 0.1 m | Suspended on a chain |
| Rubber pipe | Length around 0.3 m with a diameter around 0.05 m | Suspended on a chain |
| 2 × Ayous ( | 0.15 m × 0.03 m × 0.005 m | Suspended together on a chain |
| Larch ( | Shape as a squared block in the middle with a perimeter of around 0.27 m and six legs each with a length of around 0.1 m | Loose on the floor |
| Spruce floor toy | Shape as a squared block in the middle with a perimeter of around 0.3 m and six legs each with a length of around 0.1 m | Loose on the floor |
| Larch post | 1.2 m × 0.08 m × 0.04 m | Placed in a dispenser on the wall (the bottom end touching the floor) |
| Spruce block | 0.33 m × 0.05 m × 0.04 m | Suspended on a chain |
| Fresh-cut grass | N/A | Loose in an elevated rack |
| Hessian sack | 0.5 m × 0.76 m | Suspended |
| Easyfix® Astro 200 | Four legs (each around 0.2 m long) extending from a central holding point | Suspended on a chain |
| Bamboo | Around 0.3 m with a diameter of 0.07 m | Suspended on a chain |
A detailed list of the properties for each item is provided in .
The quantity of replenishment of fresh-cut grass provided at each check.
| High | 0.5 kg | 1 kg | 1.5 kg | 1 kg |
| Medium / Low | 0.3 kg | 0.5 kg | 1 kg | 0.5 kg |
“High” pigs were checked 3 times per day, “Medium” pigs once each morning, and “Low” pigs 3 times a week (Monday/Wednesday/Friday).
Figure 1Enrichment layout in the (A) weaner pen and (B) finisher pen.
Ethogram for behavior observation adapted from (13).
| Interact with the item | Any oral manipulation of the items with mouth open, manipulation of, or moving the items using the snout, or any physical contact with the item other than mouth/snout, whether standing, sitting or lying |
| Aggressive encounter | Biting, head-knocking or pushing over access to the device |
| Tail manipulation not at feeder (standing or lying/sitting) | Oral manipulation of the tail (tail-in-mouth) of another pig not feeding at the feeder |
| Tail manipulation at feeder | Oral manipulation of the tail (tail-in-mouth) of another pig which is feeding at the feeder |
| Ear manipulation (standing or lying/sitting) | Oral manipulation of the ear (ear-in-mouth) of another pig |
| Biting other parts of the body | Biting a pen mate in another region other than tail and ear, for example, hock, flank, snout, or genital area |
| Belly nosing | Rubbing/manipulating a pen mate's belly/flank region with rhythmic up and down snout movement |
| Mounting | Putting two front legs on top of another pig |
| Aggressive behavior | Pushing, head-knocking and open-mouth fighting with pen mates |
| Social nosing (face) | Gentle, non-open mouth nosing on another pen mate's facial area (without reaction from the recipient) ( |
| Individual play | Any scampering, pivoting, head tossing, flopping and pawing movement ( |
Figure 2Mean (± s.e.) amount of grass (g/pig/day) used between treatments over weeks post-weaning (P < 0.001). Weaner stage was from week 1–7 and finisher stage from week 8–16. “High” pigs were checked/replenished 3 times per day, “Medium” pigs once each morning, and “Low” pigs 3 times a week (Monday/Wednesday/Friday).
Figure 3Frequency of interaction by pigs with different items in the weaner and finisher stage. Different small letters denote differences between items in the weaner stage (P < 0.001), and capital letter for the finisher stage (P < 0.001), after Tukey-Kramer adjustment.
Figure 4Mean (± s.e.) frequency of interaction with grass and all other items between treatments in the weaner stage. Different small letters denote differences in grass interaction (P < 0.001), and capital letters denote differences in interactions with other items between treatments (P = 0.02). Differences were indicated after Tukey-Kramer adjustment.
Figure 5Mean (± s.e.) activity level over time based on (A) all behaviors combined (damaging + positive behaviors, see Table 3 for full ethogram, light gray bars, as frequency/pig/min) (B) total enrichment interactions (dark gray bars, as frequency/pig/min) and (C) proportion of pigs lying inactively (black line).
Descriptive comparison between the current study and two previous studies (13, 37) conducted by the same authors in the same facility.
| Experimental treatment | Single enrichment (wood or toy) and dietary fiber (high or standard) | Post-weaning same multiple enrichment items throughout or varied | Pre-weaning enrichment or not and post-weaning different enrichment replenishment rate |
| Pigs used | 672 | 96 | 576 |
| Stocking density (m2/pig) | 0.45 m2 (growers up to 30–50 kg) | 0.52 m2 (growers up to 30–50 kg) | 0.52 m2 (growers up to 30–50 kg) |
| Number of pigs permanently removed due to tail biting | 9 | 1 | 2 |
| Number of pigs temporarily removed due to tail biting incidents | 252 | 0 | 98 |
| Number of pigs receiving antibiotic injections in the home pen due to tail injuries | 52 | 0 | 4 |
| Number of tail biting outbreaks | 26 | 0 | 14 |
| Average length of outbreak | 19.6 | - | 13.3 |
| Percentage of pigs without tail amputation at the end of the study | 33.1% | 99.0% | 72.6% |
All studies used undocked pigs.