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Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Until 2012, laying hens in the EU were often housed in conventional cages that offered limited space and few opportunities to perform highly motivated behaviors. Conventional cages are now banned in the EU in order to improve animal welfare. In this study, egg farmers were surveyed (...

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Autores principales: Stadig, Lisanne M., Ampe, Bart A., Van Gansbeke, Suzy, Van den Bogaert, Tom, D’Haenens, Evelien, Heerkens, Jasper L.T., Tuyttens, Frank A.M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4730118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26703742
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010001
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author Stadig, Lisanne M.
Ampe, Bart A.
Van Gansbeke, Suzy
Van den Bogaert, Tom
D’Haenens, Evelien
Heerkens, Jasper L.T.
Tuyttens, Frank A.M.
author_facet Stadig, Lisanne M.
Ampe, Bart A.
Van Gansbeke, Suzy
Van den Bogaert, Tom
D’Haenens, Evelien
Heerkens, Jasper L.T.
Tuyttens, Frank A.M.
author_sort Stadig, Lisanne M.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Until 2012, laying hens in the EU were often housed in conventional cages that offered limited space and few opportunities to perform highly motivated behaviors. Conventional cages are now banned in the EU in order to improve animal welfare. In this study, egg farmers were surveyed (winter 2013–2014) to assess whether they perceived any changes in animal welfare since changing housing systems, what role hen welfare played in choosing a new housing system, and which aspects of hen welfare they find most important. The data show that the answers differ depending on which housing system the farmers currently use and whether they had used conventional cages in the past. ABSTRACT: As of 2012, the EU has banned the use of conventional cages (CC) for laying hens, causing a shift in housing systems. This study’s aim was to gain insight into farmers’ opinions on hen health and welfare in their current housing systems. A survey was sent to 218 Belgian egg farmers, of which 127 (58.3%) responded, with 84 still active as egg farmer. Hen welfare tended to be less important in choosing the housing system for farmers with cage than with non-cage systems. Respondents currently using cage systems were more satisfied with hen health than respondents with non-cage systems. Reported mortality increased with farm size and was higher in furnished cages than in floor housing. Feather pecking, cannibalism, smothering and mortality were perceived to be higher in current housing systems than in CC, but only by respondents who shifted to non-cage systems from previously having had CC. Health- and production-related parameters were scored to be more important for hen welfare as compared to behavior-related parameters. Those without CC in the past rated factors relating to natural behavior to be more important for welfare than those with CC. This difference in opinion based on farmer backgrounds should be taken into account in future research.
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spelling pubmed-47301182016-02-11 Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type Stadig, Lisanne M. Ampe, Bart A. Van Gansbeke, Suzy Van den Bogaert, Tom D’Haenens, Evelien Heerkens, Jasper L.T. Tuyttens, Frank A.M. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Until 2012, laying hens in the EU were often housed in conventional cages that offered limited space and few opportunities to perform highly motivated behaviors. Conventional cages are now banned in the EU in order to improve animal welfare. In this study, egg farmers were surveyed (winter 2013–2014) to assess whether they perceived any changes in animal welfare since changing housing systems, what role hen welfare played in choosing a new housing system, and which aspects of hen welfare they find most important. The data show that the answers differ depending on which housing system the farmers currently use and whether they had used conventional cages in the past. ABSTRACT: As of 2012, the EU has banned the use of conventional cages (CC) for laying hens, causing a shift in housing systems. This study’s aim was to gain insight into farmers’ opinions on hen health and welfare in their current housing systems. A survey was sent to 218 Belgian egg farmers, of which 127 (58.3%) responded, with 84 still active as egg farmer. Hen welfare tended to be less important in choosing the housing system for farmers with cage than with non-cage systems. Respondents currently using cage systems were more satisfied with hen health than respondents with non-cage systems. Reported mortality increased with farm size and was higher in furnished cages than in floor housing. Feather pecking, cannibalism, smothering and mortality were perceived to be higher in current housing systems than in CC, but only by respondents who shifted to non-cage systems from previously having had CC. Health- and production-related parameters were scored to be more important for hen welfare as compared to behavior-related parameters. Those without CC in the past rated factors relating to natural behavior to be more important for welfare than those with CC. This difference in opinion based on farmer backgrounds should be taken into account in future research. MDPI 2015-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4730118/ /pubmed/26703742 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010001 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stadig, Lisanne M.
Ampe, Bart A.
Van Gansbeke, Suzy
Van den Bogaert, Tom
D’Haenens, Evelien
Heerkens, Jasper L.T.
Tuyttens, Frank A.M.
Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title_full Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title_fullStr Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title_full_unstemmed Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title_short Opinion of Belgian Egg Farmers on Hen Welfare and Its Relationship with Housing Type
title_sort opinion of belgian egg farmers on hen welfare and its relationship with housing type
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4730118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26703742
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010001
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