| Literature DB >> 34336967 |
Mari Heinonen1, Elina Välimäki2, Anne-Maija Laakkonen1, Ina Toppari3, Johannes Vugts2, Emma Fàbrega4, Anna Valros1.
Abstract
The prevalence of tail lesions evaluated at the slaughterhouse varies considerably between herds. These lesions result mainly from tail biting, a harmful behavior with multifactorial origin. This study sought to investigate if a batchwise inspection of tails at slaughterhouse could be a useful method to estimate the animal welfare situation in finishing pig herds, and if so, what type and detail of tail scoring such an inspection should utilize. We investigated the distribution of different types of tail lesions and how well their scoring at slaughterhouse was associated with the situation recorded on-farm by a veterinarian as part of routine herd health visits. We also wanted to determine if animal welfare-related herd-level parameters, recorded by herd veterinarians during herd health visits, are associated with tail scoring at the slaughterhouse. A total of 10,517 pigtails from 84 herds were scored for this study. Herd data were collected from the national health classification register for pig farms in Finland and also included annual herd production quality data collected by the slaughterhouse. The scores of the tails varied considerably between the herds. On average, 48.1% (sd = 19.3) of the tails with an average length of 30.4 cm (sd = 2.7) were fully intact, 37.3% (13.9) had healed (length = 26.4, sd = 5.1 cm), 12.4% (9.0) (length = 28.9, sd = 4.3 cm) had minor acute wounds, and 2.3% (2.1) (length = 24.2, sd = 6.0 cm) had major acute wounds. Proportions of different tail lesions at slaughterhouse were associated with or tended to be associated with the following herd-level parameters in regression models: use of wood as enrichment (p < 0.1), one health parameter (leg problems other than arthritis, p < 0.05), and long-term animal welfare estimate (annual mortality, p < 0.05). Detailed tail evaluation at the slaughterhouse shows potential in estimating the tail lesions and long-term welfare level on the farm. By recording only one type of tail condition (such as tails with major acute lesions) at the slaughterhouse, it is not possible to estimate the total tail lesion situation in the herds before slaughter. A more detailed scoring similar to the one used in this trial is recommended.Entities:
Keywords: abattoir; harmful behavior; herd health; pig welfare; tail biting; tail scoring
Year: 2021 PMID: 34336967 PMCID: PMC8319664 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.650590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Tail scoring system used at the slaughter line after scalding of the carcass and the mean percentage and standard deviation of one delivery group of finishing pigs from 84 herds (10,517 carcasses) according to their tail lesion scores and tail length in centimeters.
| Intact | The tail is fully intact, the end is rounded, and slightly flattened | 48.1% (19.3) | 30.4 (2.7) |
| Healed | The tail is clearly shortened; the tail end is scarred, of abnormal shape or too thick to be intact. The skin is totally healed (no scab, wound, or missing tissue) | 37.3% (13.9) | 26.4 (5.1) |
| Minor acute wound | The tail has missing tissue, which has not yet fully healed; uneven “dents” in the skin; or a part of the tail is missing. Wound is >0 cm but <2 cm in diameter or length | 12.4% (9.0) | 28.9 (4.3) |
| Major acute wound | The tail has missing tissue, which has not yet fully healed; uneven “dents” in the skin; or a part of the tail is missing. Wound is ≥2 cm in diameter or length | 2.3% (2.1) | 24.2 (6.0) |
Summary of the data collected by the herd health veterinarians in finishing units of 84 herds during routine Sikava herd health visits.
| 1. Percentage of pigs with bitten tails | None or single pigs | Some, 1–5% of the pigs | Several, 6–10% of the pigs | Plenty, >10% of the pigs |
| 2. Disease symptoms (arthritis, claw injury, leg problem other than arthritis, coughing, sneezing, diarrhea, skin injury or infection, abscesses, central nervous system symptoms, runts, and hernia) | None or single pigs | Some, 1–5% of the pigs | Several, 6–10% of the pigs | Plenty, >10% of the pigs |
| 3. Evaluation of the percentage of intact tails (=a tail with full length and curled up. If a tail has signs of healed or acute TB and the tail is shortened/damaged/stuck between legs, it is not intact). | Intact >95% of the pigs | Intact >80% of the pigs | Intact >70% of the pigs | Intact <70% of the pigs |
| 1 = Good | 2 = Satisfactory | 3 = Poor | ||
| 1. Explorative behavior to given material. Behavior of standing animals if they are not eating, drinking defecating or urinating. The behavior should be directed toward enrichment material, not toward pen structures or pen mates. | >70% of pigs explore enrichment | 40–70% of pigs explore enrichment | <40% of pigs explore enrichment | |
| 2. Reaction of the pigs to the examiner, evaluated after examiner was first walking from one end of the corridor to another. The examiner did not enter the pen. | Pigs approach the examiner within few minutes | Only some pigs dare to approach the examiner | Pigs do not approach the examiner, are afraid, stay in the back of the pen | |
| Use of materials as environmental enrichment, the material used was recorded (Toy, straw, sawdust, wood, paper, peat, hay, wood chips, other) | 0 = Not used | 1 = Yes, used | ||
| Inter-visit mortality | % of finishing pigs dead or euthanized after the previous visit | |||
Correlation of percentages of herd-level tail evaluations from 84 Finnish herds.
| Intact | −0.858 | −0.706 | −0.539 |
| Healed | 0.258 | 0.270 | |
| With minor wounds | 0.522 |
Pearson correlation,
p < 0.01 and
p < 0.05.
Undocked tails of finishing pigs (n = 10,517) were evaluated at the slaughterhouse after scalding.
Figure 1Frequency distributions of percentages of tail classifications in 84 herds: (A) intact tails, (B) healed tails, (C) tails with minor wounds, (D) tails with major wounds. Undocked tails of finishing pigs (n = 10,517) were evaluated at the slaughterhouse after scalding.
Figure 2Study herds (n = 84) organized according to classification of the undocked tails of their finishing pigs in slaughterhouse: percentage of intact tails, tails with healed lesions, tails with minor acute wounds, and tails with major acute wounds ordered according to increasing proportion of intact tails.
Figure 3The average percentage of undocked tails of finishing pigs per herd (n = 84) scored at the slaughterhouse in four categories (intact, healed, with minor acute wounds, and with major acute wounds) and divided according to the evaluation recorded in the same herds during the herd health visit (TL, Tail Lesion <1%: no or single cases of tail-bitten pigs during the herd health visit, TL 1–10% of pigs with bitten tail). Within tail score comparisons, different letters represent statistical significance or tendency: ab p < 0.01, AB p < 0.1.
Figure 4The average percentage of undocked tails of finishing pigs per herd (n = 84) scored at the slaughterhouse in four categories (intact, healed, with minor acute wounds, and with major acute wounds) and divided according to the evaluation of the percentage of intact tails recorded during the herd health visits (>95%, >80%, or ≤80%). Within tail score comparisons, different letters represent statistical significance: ab p < 0.01, cd p < 0.05.
Information recorded by veterinarian during one herd health visit on the use of different materials used as environmental enrichment in 84 study herds growing finishing pigs.
| Toy | 16 (19.0%) | 68 (81.0%) |
| Straw | 21 (25.0%) | 63 (75.0%) |
| Sawdust | 27 (32.1%) | 57 (67.8%) |
| Wood | 56 (66.7%) | 28 (33.3%) |
| Paper | 58 (69.0%) | 26 (31.0%) |
| Peat | 64 (76.1%) | 20 (23.8%) |
| Hay | 65 (77.4%) | 19 (22.6%) |
| Wood chips | 83 (98.8%) | 1 (1.2%) |
| Other | 82 (97.6%) | 2 (2.4%) |
The farms may have used more than one material.
The presence of different symptoms in the finishing pigs (number and percentage of herds out of 84) recorded by herd veterinarians during one herd health visit.
| Arthritis | 10 (11.9%) | 68 (81.0%) | 6 (7.1%) | 0 |
| Claw injury | 68 (81.0%) | 16 (19.0%) | 0 | 0 |
| Leg problem other than arthritis | 40 (47.6%) | 44 (52.4%) | 0 | 0 |
| Coughing | 73 (86.9%) | 8 (9.5%) | 3 (3.6%) | 0 |
| Sneezing | 77 (91.7%) | 7 (8.3%) | 0 | 0 |
| Diarrhea | 66 (78.6%) | 18 (21.4%) | 0 | 0 |
| Skin injury or infection | 44 (52.4%) | 40 (47.6%) | 0 | 0 |
| Abscesses | 50 (59.5%) | 34 (40.5%) | 0 | 0 |
| Central nervous system symptoms | 79 (94.0%) | 5 (6.0%) | 0 | 0 |
| Runts | 36 (42.8%) | 48 (57.1%) | 0 | 0 |
| Hernia | 10 (11.9%) | 71 (84.5%) | 3 (3.6%) | 0 |
Figure 5Percentage of undocked, intact tails of finishing pigs evaluated at the slaughterhouse. The pigs originated from 84 herds, where the herd veterinarian collected the data during one herd health visit. The results are shown separately for herds using wood as enrichment and having leg problems other than arthritis present in the herd during the herd visit (interaction in the regression model). Different letters represent statistical difference: ab p < 0.01.
Figure 6Percentage of undocked, tails with major acute wounds evaluated at slaughterhouse. The finishing pigs originated from 84 herds, where the herd veterinarian collected the data during one herd health visit. The results are shown separately for herds using wood as enrichment and according to explorative behavior of standing animals if they were not eating, drinking, defecating, or urinating (interaction), as evaluated by a veterinarian during the herd health visit. The behavior was directed toward enrichment material and not toward pen structures or pen mates. Different letters represent statistical difference: ef p < 0.001.