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Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security

The increase in the slaughter of pregnant cows (SPCs) for meat (except as may be approved by veterinarians on health grounds to salvage the animal) is unethical. SPCs for meat is also counterproductive, detrimental to food security, and may enhance zoonotic disease transmission. In this context, the...

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Autores principales: Njoga, Ugochinyere J., Njoga, Emmanuel O., Nwobi, Obichukwu C., Abonyi, Festus O., Edeh, Henry O., Ajibo, Festus E., Azor, Nichodemus, Bello, Abubakar, Upadhyay, Anjani K., Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R., Korzeniowska, Małgorzata, Guiné, Raquel P. F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8229330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34198871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298
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author Njoga, Ugochinyere J.
Njoga, Emmanuel O.
Nwobi, Obichukwu C.
Abonyi, Festus O.
Edeh, Henry O.
Ajibo, Festus E.
Azor, Nichodemus
Bello, Abubakar
Upadhyay, Anjani K.
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
Korzeniowska, Małgorzata
Guiné, Raquel P. F.
author_facet Njoga, Ugochinyere J.
Njoga, Emmanuel O.
Nwobi, Obichukwu C.
Abonyi, Festus O.
Edeh, Henry O.
Ajibo, Festus E.
Azor, Nichodemus
Bello, Abubakar
Upadhyay, Anjani K.
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
Korzeniowska, Małgorzata
Guiné, Raquel P. F.
author_sort Njoga, Ugochinyere J.
collection PubMed
description The increase in the slaughter of pregnant cows (SPCs) for meat (except as may be approved by veterinarians on health grounds to salvage the animal) is unethical. SPCs for meat is also counterproductive, detrimental to food security, and may enhance zoonotic disease transmission. In this context, therefore, this current study examined slaughter conditions and the slaughtering of pregnant cows, and the implications for meat quality, food safety, and food security in Southeast Nigeria. The direct observational method was employed to examine the slaughterhouse activities, from when the cattle arrived at the lairage to the post-slaughter stage. A pre-tested and validated closed-ended-questionnaire was used to elicit information on causes of the SPCs and the method of disposal of eviscerated foetuses. Pregnancy status of cows slaughtered was determined by palpation followed by visual examination of the eviscerated and longitudinal incised uteri. The study lasted for six months during which 851 cows out of 1931 slaughtered cattle were surveyed. Assessment/decision-making protocol of slaughterhouse conditions, welfare conditions of slaughter-cattle, reasons for sale or slaughter of pregnant cows, distribution of pregnant cows slaughtered, method of disposal of eviscerated foetuses, and estimated economic losses of SPCs were delineated. Of the 851 cows examined, 17.4% (148/851) were pregnant while 43.2% (64/148) of the total foetuses recovered were in their third trimester. Major reasons adduced for SPCs by proportion of involved respondents were: ignorance of the animals’ pregnancy status (69.7%, 83/119), high demand for beef (61.3%, 73/119), preference for large-sized cattle (47.9%, 57/119), economic hardship (52.1%, 62/119) and diseases conditions (42.9%. 51/119). The conduct of SPCs for meat would not be profitable. This is because within six months, an estimated loss of about 44,000 kg of beef, equivalent to ₦ 70.1 million or $186,400 would be associated with SPCs and the consequential foetal wastages. If losses were to be replicated nationwide across slaughterhouses, 4.3 tons of beef estimated at ₦ 8.6 billion or $23 million would be wasted. Improving slaughter conditions and the welfare of slaughter-cattle in Nigerian slaughterhouses through advocacy, training of slaughterhouse workers, and strict implementation of laws promoting humane slaughter practices is imperative. Preventing SPCs for meat and inhumane slaughter practices at the slaughterhouse would enhance the welfare needs of slaughter cattle, grow the national herd size, and improve meat safety as well as food security.
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spelling pubmed-82293302021-06-26 Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security Njoga, Ugochinyere J. Njoga, Emmanuel O. Nwobi, Obichukwu C. Abonyi, Festus O. Edeh, Henry O. Ajibo, Festus E. Azor, Nichodemus Bello, Abubakar Upadhyay, Anjani K. Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R. Korzeniowska, Małgorzata Guiné, Raquel P. F. Foods Article The increase in the slaughter of pregnant cows (SPCs) for meat (except as may be approved by veterinarians on health grounds to salvage the animal) is unethical. SPCs for meat is also counterproductive, detrimental to food security, and may enhance zoonotic disease transmission. In this context, therefore, this current study examined slaughter conditions and the slaughtering of pregnant cows, and the implications for meat quality, food safety, and food security in Southeast Nigeria. The direct observational method was employed to examine the slaughterhouse activities, from when the cattle arrived at the lairage to the post-slaughter stage. A pre-tested and validated closed-ended-questionnaire was used to elicit information on causes of the SPCs and the method of disposal of eviscerated foetuses. Pregnancy status of cows slaughtered was determined by palpation followed by visual examination of the eviscerated and longitudinal incised uteri. The study lasted for six months during which 851 cows out of 1931 slaughtered cattle were surveyed. Assessment/decision-making protocol of slaughterhouse conditions, welfare conditions of slaughter-cattle, reasons for sale or slaughter of pregnant cows, distribution of pregnant cows slaughtered, method of disposal of eviscerated foetuses, and estimated economic losses of SPCs were delineated. Of the 851 cows examined, 17.4% (148/851) were pregnant while 43.2% (64/148) of the total foetuses recovered were in their third trimester. Major reasons adduced for SPCs by proportion of involved respondents were: ignorance of the animals’ pregnancy status (69.7%, 83/119), high demand for beef (61.3%, 73/119), preference for large-sized cattle (47.9%, 57/119), economic hardship (52.1%, 62/119) and diseases conditions (42.9%. 51/119). The conduct of SPCs for meat would not be profitable. This is because within six months, an estimated loss of about 44,000 kg of beef, equivalent to ₦ 70.1 million or $186,400 would be associated with SPCs and the consequential foetal wastages. If losses were to be replicated nationwide across slaughterhouses, 4.3 tons of beef estimated at ₦ 8.6 billion or $23 million would be wasted. Improving slaughter conditions and the welfare of slaughter-cattle in Nigerian slaughterhouses through advocacy, training of slaughterhouse workers, and strict implementation of laws promoting humane slaughter practices is imperative. Preventing SPCs for meat and inhumane slaughter practices at the slaughterhouse would enhance the welfare needs of slaughter cattle, grow the national herd size, and improve meat safety as well as food security. MDPI 2021-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8229330/ /pubmed/34198871 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Njoga, Ugochinyere J.
Njoga, Emmanuel O.
Nwobi, Obichukwu C.
Abonyi, Festus O.
Edeh, Henry O.
Ajibo, Festus E.
Azor, Nichodemus
Bello, Abubakar
Upadhyay, Anjani K.
Okpala, Charles Odilichukwu R.
Korzeniowska, Małgorzata
Guiné, Raquel P. F.
Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title_full Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title_fullStr Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title_full_unstemmed Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title_short Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
title_sort slaughter conditions and slaughtering of pregnant cows in southeast nigeria: implications to meat quality, food safety and security
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8229330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34198871
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298
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