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Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems

Dromedary camel husbandry has recently been evolving towards a semi-intensive system, due to the changes in use of the animal and the settlement of nomadic populations. Captivity could restrict its social activities, limiting the expression of various behavioural needs and causing the manifestation...

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Autores principales: Padalino, Barbara, Aubé, Lydiane, Fatnassi, Meriem, Monaco, Davide, Khorchani, Touhami, Hammadi, Mohamed, Lacalandra, Giovanni Michele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089093
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author Padalino, Barbara
Aubé, Lydiane
Fatnassi, Meriem
Monaco, Davide
Khorchani, Touhami
Hammadi, Mohamed
Lacalandra, Giovanni Michele
author_facet Padalino, Barbara
Aubé, Lydiane
Fatnassi, Meriem
Monaco, Davide
Khorchani, Touhami
Hammadi, Mohamed
Lacalandra, Giovanni Michele
author_sort Padalino, Barbara
collection PubMed
description Dromedary camel husbandry has recently been evolving towards a semi-intensive system, due to the changes in use of the animal and the settlement of nomadic populations. Captivity could restrict its social activities, limiting the expression of various behavioural needs and causing the manifestation of stereotypy. The aims of this trial were, firstly, to identify and describe some stereotypical behaviours in captive male dromedary camels used for artificial insemination and, secondly, to study the effects on them of the following husbandry management systems: i) housing in single boxes for 24 hours (H24), ii) housing in single boxes for 23 hours with one hour free in the paddock (H23), and iii) housing in single boxes for 22 hours 30 min with 1 h of paddock time and 30 min exposure to a female camel herd (ExF). Every day, the camels were filmed in their single box in the morning for 30 minutes to record their behavioural activities and a focal animal sampling ethogram was filled in. In this study, male camels showed both oral and locomotor stereotypy most frequently when the bulls were reared in H24. Overall, this preliminary study is a starting point in the identification of stereotypies in male camels, reporting the positive effects of spending one hour outdoor and of social interaction with females.
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spelling pubmed-39296582014-02-25 Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems Padalino, Barbara Aubé, Lydiane Fatnassi, Meriem Monaco, Davide Khorchani, Touhami Hammadi, Mohamed Lacalandra, Giovanni Michele PLoS One Research Article Dromedary camel husbandry has recently been evolving towards a semi-intensive system, due to the changes in use of the animal and the settlement of nomadic populations. Captivity could restrict its social activities, limiting the expression of various behavioural needs and causing the manifestation of stereotypy. The aims of this trial were, firstly, to identify and describe some stereotypical behaviours in captive male dromedary camels used for artificial insemination and, secondly, to study the effects on them of the following husbandry management systems: i) housing in single boxes for 24 hours (H24), ii) housing in single boxes for 23 hours with one hour free in the paddock (H23), and iii) housing in single boxes for 22 hours 30 min with 1 h of paddock time and 30 min exposure to a female camel herd (ExF). Every day, the camels were filmed in their single box in the morning for 30 minutes to record their behavioural activities and a focal animal sampling ethogram was filled in. In this study, male camels showed both oral and locomotor stereotypy most frequently when the bulls were reared in H24. Overall, this preliminary study is a starting point in the identification of stereotypies in male camels, reporting the positive effects of spending one hour outdoor and of social interaction with females. Public Library of Science 2014-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3929658/ /pubmed/24586522 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089093 Text en © 2014 Padalino et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Padalino, Barbara
Aubé, Lydiane
Fatnassi, Meriem
Monaco, Davide
Khorchani, Touhami
Hammadi, Mohamed
Lacalandra, Giovanni Michele
Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title_full Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title_fullStr Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title_full_unstemmed Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title_short Could Dromedary Camels Develop Stereotypy? The First Description of Stereotypical Behaviour in Housed Male Dromedary Camels and How It Is Affected by Different Management Systems
title_sort could dromedary camels develop stereotypy? the first description of stereotypical behaviour in housed male dromedary camels and how it is affected by different management systems
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24586522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089093
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