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Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Broiler chickens should be able to express highly motivated behaviors, such as foraging and dustbathing. Health status and housing conditions impact the expression of these behaviors. This study compared the impact of novel flooring treatments on broiler chicken behavioral repertoire...

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Autores principales: Jacobs, Leonie, Melick, Shawnna, Freeman, Nathan, Garmyn, An, Tuyttens, Frank A. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8532823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34679862
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11102841
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author Jacobs, Leonie
Melick, Shawnna
Freeman, Nathan
Garmyn, An
Tuyttens, Frank A. M.
author_facet Jacobs, Leonie
Melick, Shawnna
Freeman, Nathan
Garmyn, An
Tuyttens, Frank A. M.
author_sort Jacobs, Leonie
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Broiler chickens should be able to express highly motivated behaviors, such as foraging and dustbathing. Health status and housing conditions impact the expression of these behaviors. This study compared the impact of novel flooring treatments on broiler chicken behavioral repertoire. We found that broilers’ behavior was impacted by novel flooring treatments at 5 and 6 weeks of age. Differences were found in prevalences of drinking, foraging, preening, locomoting, and in generally being active. Generally, broilers with access to clean friable litter spent more time drinking, foraging, locomoting, preening and being active compared to when housed with a partially slatted floor and/or a disinfectant mat. Thus, access to clean, regularly replaced litter is beneficial for broiler chicken welfare, especially for their ability to perform normal behaviors. ABSTRACT: The objective was to determine broiler chicken behavioral differences in response to novel flooring treatments. Broilers (n = 182) were housed in 14 pens (a random subset from a larger-scale study including 42 pens), with 13 birds/pen. One of seven flooring treatments were randomly allocated to 14 pens (2 pens per treatment). The flooring treatments (provided from day 1 {1} or day 29 {29}) included regularly replaced shavings (POS), a mat with 1% povidone-iodine solution (MAT), and the iodine mat placed on a partially slatted floor (SLAT). In addition, a negative control treatment was included with birds kept on used litter from day 1 (NEG). Behavior was recorded in weeks 1, 2, 5, and 6. In week 5, treatments affected the behavioral repertoire (p ≤ 0.035). Birds in POS-1 showed more locomoting, preening and activity overall compared to MAT and/or SLAT treatments. Birds in POS-29 showed more drinking, foraging, preening and overall activity than birds in MAT and/or SLAT treatments. In week 6, birds in the POS-1 treatment spent more time foraging compared to birds in all MAT and SLAT treatments (p ≤ 0.030). In addition, birds in the POS-1 treatment spent more time preening than birds in the MAT-1 treatment (p = 0.046). Our results indicate that access to partially slatted flooring and/or disinfectant mats does not benefit broiler chicken welfare in terms of their ability to express highly motivated behaviors. Access to clean, regularly replaced litter is beneficial for broiler chicken welfare in terms of their ability to express their normal behavioral repertoire.
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spelling pubmed-85328232021-10-23 Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments Jacobs, Leonie Melick, Shawnna Freeman, Nathan Garmyn, An Tuyttens, Frank A. M. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Broiler chickens should be able to express highly motivated behaviors, such as foraging and dustbathing. Health status and housing conditions impact the expression of these behaviors. This study compared the impact of novel flooring treatments on broiler chicken behavioral repertoire. We found that broilers’ behavior was impacted by novel flooring treatments at 5 and 6 weeks of age. Differences were found in prevalences of drinking, foraging, preening, locomoting, and in generally being active. Generally, broilers with access to clean friable litter spent more time drinking, foraging, locomoting, preening and being active compared to when housed with a partially slatted floor and/or a disinfectant mat. Thus, access to clean, regularly replaced litter is beneficial for broiler chicken welfare, especially for their ability to perform normal behaviors. ABSTRACT: The objective was to determine broiler chicken behavioral differences in response to novel flooring treatments. Broilers (n = 182) were housed in 14 pens (a random subset from a larger-scale study including 42 pens), with 13 birds/pen. One of seven flooring treatments were randomly allocated to 14 pens (2 pens per treatment). The flooring treatments (provided from day 1 {1} or day 29 {29}) included regularly replaced shavings (POS), a mat with 1% povidone-iodine solution (MAT), and the iodine mat placed on a partially slatted floor (SLAT). In addition, a negative control treatment was included with birds kept on used litter from day 1 (NEG). Behavior was recorded in weeks 1, 2, 5, and 6. In week 5, treatments affected the behavioral repertoire (p ≤ 0.035). Birds in POS-1 showed more locomoting, preening and activity overall compared to MAT and/or SLAT treatments. Birds in POS-29 showed more drinking, foraging, preening and overall activity than birds in MAT and/or SLAT treatments. In week 6, birds in the POS-1 treatment spent more time foraging compared to birds in all MAT and SLAT treatments (p ≤ 0.030). In addition, birds in the POS-1 treatment spent more time preening than birds in the MAT-1 treatment (p = 0.046). Our results indicate that access to partially slatted flooring and/or disinfectant mats does not benefit broiler chicken welfare in terms of their ability to express highly motivated behaviors. Access to clean, regularly replaced litter is beneficial for broiler chicken welfare in terms of their ability to express their normal behavioral repertoire. MDPI 2021-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8532823/ /pubmed/34679862 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11102841 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
Jacobs, Leonie
Melick, Shawnna
Freeman, Nathan
Garmyn, An
Tuyttens, Frank A. M.
Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title_full Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title_fullStr Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title_full_unstemmed Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title_short Broiler Chicken Behavior and Activity Are Affected by Novel Flooring Treatments
title_sort broiler chicken behavior and activity are affected by novel flooring treatments
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8532823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34679862
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11102841
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