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Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Identifying effective and economically feasible changes to apply at the farming level to improve animal welfare are of great importance. Horses reared for meat production are conventionally fed high amounts of concentrates rich in starch and simple sugars; however, horses are herbivo...

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Autores principales: Raspa, Federica, Tarantola, Martina, Muca, Edlira, Bergero, Domenico, Soglia, Dominga, Cavallini, Damiano, Vervuert, Ingrid, Bordin, Clara, De Palo, Pasquale, Valle, Emanuela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9311627/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35883287
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12141740
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author Raspa, Federica
Tarantola, Martina
Muca, Edlira
Bergero, Domenico
Soglia, Dominga
Cavallini, Damiano
Vervuert, Ingrid
Bordin, Clara
De Palo, Pasquale
Valle, Emanuela
author_facet Raspa, Federica
Tarantola, Martina
Muca, Edlira
Bergero, Domenico
Soglia, Dominga
Cavallini, Damiano
Vervuert, Ingrid
Bordin, Clara
De Palo, Pasquale
Valle, Emanuela
author_sort Raspa, Federica
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Identifying effective and economically feasible changes to apply at the farming level to improve animal welfare are of great importance. Horses reared for meat production are conventionally fed high amounts of concentrates rich in starch and simple sugars; however, horses are herbivores and adapted to eat a fibre-based diet. The aim of the present study was to assess the effects of two different feeding management systems on the behavioural activities and subsequent welfare of horses reared for meat purposes. Our findings provide new insights into the positive consequences of feeding horses reared for meat production on a fibre-based diet in terms of both welfare and farming economics. This change in feed management allows horses to express a more natural time budget, spending more time expressing feeding behaviour, which improves horse welfare and reduces energy expenditure in the form of excitable behaviours. ABSTRACT: Horses reared for meat production are generally fed a diet rich in starch with the aim of maximizing production performances. This study evaluated the effects of two feeding management systems on horse welfare by analysing the relative time spent engaged in different behavioural activities. Nineteen Bardigiano horses aged 14.3 ± 0.7 months were randomly assigned to one of two group pens: one group was fed high amounts of starch-rich concentrates (HCG; n = 10), the other was fed a fibre-based diet (HFG; n = 9). Behavioural activities performed by each horse were video-recorded over a 96-h period. A scan sampling process (n = 144 scans/horse/day; total n of scans sampled = 10,368) was used, and the scans were analysed according to a specific ethogram. The mean frequency (%/24 h) spent exhibiting each behavioural activity was calculated to obtain the time budget. After checking for normality (Shapiro–Wilk test), Student’s t tests (normally distributed data) and Mann–Whitney tests (not normally distributed data) were used to compare the time budgets of the two groups of horses (HCG vs. HFG). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was applied to identify the components explaining the variability in behavioural activities between the two groups. K-means cluster analysis subsequently confirmed the PCA results. The behavioural activities associated with feeding horses a fibre-based diet correlated with better horse welfare compared with feeding horses a starch-based diet. Feeding horses a fibre-based diet resulted advantageous from both the welfare and economic perspective; it allowed horses to spend more time expressing feeding behaviours and reduced energy expenditure in the form of excitable, or “fizzy”, behaviours.
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spelling pubmed-93116272022-07-26 Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production? Raspa, Federica Tarantola, Martina Muca, Edlira Bergero, Domenico Soglia, Dominga Cavallini, Damiano Vervuert, Ingrid Bordin, Clara De Palo, Pasquale Valle, Emanuela Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Identifying effective and economically feasible changes to apply at the farming level to improve animal welfare are of great importance. Horses reared for meat production are conventionally fed high amounts of concentrates rich in starch and simple sugars; however, horses are herbivores and adapted to eat a fibre-based diet. The aim of the present study was to assess the effects of two different feeding management systems on the behavioural activities and subsequent welfare of horses reared for meat purposes. Our findings provide new insights into the positive consequences of feeding horses reared for meat production on a fibre-based diet in terms of both welfare and farming economics. This change in feed management allows horses to express a more natural time budget, spending more time expressing feeding behaviour, which improves horse welfare and reduces energy expenditure in the form of excitable behaviours. ABSTRACT: Horses reared for meat production are generally fed a diet rich in starch with the aim of maximizing production performances. This study evaluated the effects of two feeding management systems on horse welfare by analysing the relative time spent engaged in different behavioural activities. Nineteen Bardigiano horses aged 14.3 ± 0.7 months were randomly assigned to one of two group pens: one group was fed high amounts of starch-rich concentrates (HCG; n = 10), the other was fed a fibre-based diet (HFG; n = 9). Behavioural activities performed by each horse were video-recorded over a 96-h period. A scan sampling process (n = 144 scans/horse/day; total n of scans sampled = 10,368) was used, and the scans were analysed according to a specific ethogram. The mean frequency (%/24 h) spent exhibiting each behavioural activity was calculated to obtain the time budget. After checking for normality (Shapiro–Wilk test), Student’s t tests (normally distributed data) and Mann–Whitney tests (not normally distributed data) were used to compare the time budgets of the two groups of horses (HCG vs. HFG). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was applied to identify the components explaining the variability in behavioural activities between the two groups. K-means cluster analysis subsequently confirmed the PCA results. The behavioural activities associated with feeding horses a fibre-based diet correlated with better horse welfare compared with feeding horses a starch-based diet. Feeding horses a fibre-based diet resulted advantageous from both the welfare and economic perspective; it allowed horses to spend more time expressing feeding behaviours and reduced energy expenditure in the form of excitable, or “fizzy”, behaviours. MDPI 2022-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9311627/ /pubmed/35883287 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12141740 Text en © 2022 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
Raspa, Federica
Tarantola, Martina
Muca, Edlira
Bergero, Domenico
Soglia, Dominga
Cavallini, Damiano
Vervuert, Ingrid
Bordin, Clara
De Palo, Pasquale
Valle, Emanuela
Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title_full Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title_fullStr Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title_full_unstemmed Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title_short Does Feeding Management Make a Difference to Behavioural Activities and Welfare of Horses Reared for Meat Production?
title_sort does feeding management make a difference to behavioural activities and welfare of horses reared for meat production?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9311627/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35883287
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12141740
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