Cargando…

Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Free-range facilities may present a biosecurity risk in some situations, but range use has also been associated with better hen welfare. We investigated the association between early-life range use (when hens were 18–21 weeks of age) and hen survival during the entire housing period...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sibanda, Terence Zimazile, O’Shea, Cormac J., de Souza Vilela, Jessica, Kolakshyapati, Manisha, Welch, Mitchell, Schneider, Derek, Courtice, Jodi, Ruhnke, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7603192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33081048
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10101911
_version_ 1783603866472808448
author Sibanda, Terence Zimazile
O’Shea, Cormac J.
de Souza Vilela, Jessica
Kolakshyapati, Manisha
Welch, Mitchell
Schneider, Derek
Courtice, Jodi
Ruhnke, Isabelle
author_facet Sibanda, Terence Zimazile
O’Shea, Cormac J.
de Souza Vilela, Jessica
Kolakshyapati, Manisha
Welch, Mitchell
Schneider, Derek
Courtice, Jodi
Ruhnke, Isabelle
author_sort Sibanda, Terence Zimazile
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Free-range facilities may present a biosecurity risk in some situations, but range use has also been associated with better hen welfare. We investigated the association between early-life range use (when hens were 18–21 weeks of age) and hen survival during the entire housing period as well as various health and welfare parameters at 74 weeks of age. Hens that preferred to use the range at early life were three times more likely to survive. Early range users were also 1.6 times more likely to become infected with gastrointestinal nematodes and showed significantly more frequent signs indicating spotty liver disease. Hens that preferred to stay in the shed during early life had a higher prevalence of Fatty Liver Syndrome and significantly less feather cover. In conclusion, hens that do not range during early life may benefit from additional management strategies to increase their likelihood of survival. Further investigations under controlled environmental conditions are warranted to quantify further the observed effects. ABSTRACT: While free-range laying hens frequently experience health and welfare challenges, the contribution of range use towards these risks are largely unknown. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate the survival, health and welfare of commercial free-range laying hens and explore the association with early range use. Range use of 9375 Lohmann Brown hens housed within five flocks was assessed during 18–21 weeks of age and individual hens were classified as “rangers” (frequent range users), “roamers” (intermittent range users), and “stayers” (rare/no range users) were then subject to necropsy at 74 weeks of age. Rangers and roamers were three times and 2.4 times more likely to survive than stayers, respectively (p = 0.001). Overall, rangers had significantly better feather cover and more lesions associated with spotty liver diseases compared to roamers and stayers (p = 0.001). Similarly, rangers and roamers had a higher prevalence of A. galli infection and less frequent signs of fatty liver syndrome compared to stayers. Rangers had a higher proportion of hens with full ovary follicle production compared to stayers and roamers (p = 0.035). This information is highly relevant to consider the targeted support of different flock subpopulations to improve hen health and welfare, directly affecting farm profitability. Further research on other farms is warranted to investigate the transferability of the observed results.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7603192
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-76031922020-11-01 Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study Sibanda, Terence Zimazile O’Shea, Cormac J. de Souza Vilela, Jessica Kolakshyapati, Manisha Welch, Mitchell Schneider, Derek Courtice, Jodi Ruhnke, Isabelle Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Free-range facilities may present a biosecurity risk in some situations, but range use has also been associated with better hen welfare. We investigated the association between early-life range use (when hens were 18–21 weeks of age) and hen survival during the entire housing period as well as various health and welfare parameters at 74 weeks of age. Hens that preferred to use the range at early life were three times more likely to survive. Early range users were also 1.6 times more likely to become infected with gastrointestinal nematodes and showed significantly more frequent signs indicating spotty liver disease. Hens that preferred to stay in the shed during early life had a higher prevalence of Fatty Liver Syndrome and significantly less feather cover. In conclusion, hens that do not range during early life may benefit from additional management strategies to increase their likelihood of survival. Further investigations under controlled environmental conditions are warranted to quantify further the observed effects. ABSTRACT: While free-range laying hens frequently experience health and welfare challenges, the contribution of range use towards these risks are largely unknown. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate the survival, health and welfare of commercial free-range laying hens and explore the association with early range use. Range use of 9375 Lohmann Brown hens housed within five flocks was assessed during 18–21 weeks of age and individual hens were classified as “rangers” (frequent range users), “roamers” (intermittent range users), and “stayers” (rare/no range users) were then subject to necropsy at 74 weeks of age. Rangers and roamers were three times and 2.4 times more likely to survive than stayers, respectively (p = 0.001). Overall, rangers had significantly better feather cover and more lesions associated with spotty liver diseases compared to roamers and stayers (p = 0.001). Similarly, rangers and roamers had a higher prevalence of A. galli infection and less frequent signs of fatty liver syndrome compared to stayers. Rangers had a higher proportion of hens with full ovary follicle production compared to stayers and roamers (p = 0.035). This information is highly relevant to consider the targeted support of different flock subpopulations to improve hen health and welfare, directly affecting farm profitability. Further research on other farms is warranted to investigate the transferability of the observed results. MDPI 2020-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7603192/ /pubmed/33081048 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10101911 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sibanda, Terence Zimazile
O’Shea, Cormac J.
de Souza Vilela, Jessica
Kolakshyapati, Manisha
Welch, Mitchell
Schneider, Derek
Courtice, Jodi
Ruhnke, Isabelle
Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title_full Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title_fullStr Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title_full_unstemmed Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title_short Managing Free-Range Laying Hens—Part B: Early Range Users Have More Pathology Findings at the End of Lay but Have a Significantly Higher Chance of Survival—An Indicative Study
title_sort managing free-range laying hens—part b: early range users have more pathology findings at the end of lay but have a significantly higher chance of survival—an indicative study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7603192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33081048
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10101911
work_keys_str_mv AT sibandaterencezimazile managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT osheacormacj managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT desouzavilelajessica managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT kolakshyapatimanisha managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT welchmitchell managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT schneiderderek managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT courticejodi managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy
AT ruhnkeisabelle managingfreerangelayinghenspartbearlyrangeusershavemorepathologyfindingsattheendoflaybuthaveasignificantlyhigherchanceofsurvivalanindicativestudy