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1.
Animals (Basel) ; 14(11)2024 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38891565

ABSTRACT

The proliferation of rearing systems providing opportunities for birds to engage in natural behaviors can trigger behavioral repertoires that when not manageable compromise animal welfare and the economic viability of the flock. Smothering in laying hens has long been perceived as "natural" or the result of hysteria among birds in the flock. However, the current literature has recognized smothering as an abnormal outcome with the potential to result in significant losses in cage-free poultry systems. Recent studies have specifically aimed to categorize the organization of smothering behavior and highlight its potential causes and consequences. In this study, literature review and bibliographic mapping, drawing on published articles and engagement with poultry farmers through extension and rural technical assistance, were employed. The findings indicate that smothering is a behavior triggered by factors related to the environment in which the laying hens are kept. This study concludes that there is a critical need for more rigorous and detailed research to elucidate the nuances of avian behavioral physiology and assess the impact of production systems on animal welfare and the economic impacts on the flock. This research contributes to a deeper understanding of bird behavior in high-production environments and provides practical insights for the poultry industry.

2.
Physiol Behav ; 132: 36-43, 2014 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24813705

ABSTRACT

Gestation stalls are criticized for its negative physical and psycho-physiological effects on sow welfare. Group housing benefits sow well-being and when planned properly can minimize aggression during mixing. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of short-term feeding of a TRP-enriched diet at a concentration of 220% the control (CTL) diet, on aggressiveness at mixing of sows at 4weeks of gestation. Treatment diets were fed for 7 consecutive days; from days 1 to 5 sows were housed in stalls, early in the morning on day 6 sows were grouped by parity and assessed until day 7. Eighteen pens with 4 sows each (n=72) of similar parity were assigned to CTL and TRP treatments. Sows' behaviors were recorded daily for 12h, from days 1 to 7. Inactive and active behaviors (alert, walking (pen), rooting, feeding, drinking, eliminating), stereotypic behaviors (bar biting and sham-chewing), and postures (standing, sitting, lying) were assessed by 10-minute scan sampling. Occurrence of agonistic interactions, number of actions such as bites, head knocks and pursuits and their sum per interaction were recorded for each pen using 2-h continuous behavioral observation, at days 6 and 7. Skin lesion scores were assessed from each sow at day 5 and at 48h post-mixing, using a sow body map subdivided into anterior, central and posterior body regions. A linear mixed model with day as repeated measure, stall or pen as experimental unit, tested the fixed effects of treatment, day, period within day, their interactions, and block by treatment interaction; stall (trt) or pen (trt) as appropriate was used as random effect. Blood concentration of TRP was higher on the mixing day in TRP-fed sows compared to baseline (76%) and CLT-fed sows at mixing (79%; P<0.05), while serotonin concentration did not differ between treatments (P>0.05). The TRP-enriched diet was effective in reducing sham-chewing in stall housed sows of parity 5-9 (P<0.05). In pens, TRP-fed sows spent more time rooting (TRP=28.0 vs. CTL=20.7±1.0%; P<0.05) and consequently less time lying down than CTL-fed sows (TRP=56.1 vs. CTL=65.1±2.0%; P<0.05). The total number of offensive actions per interaction was greater in the morning than afternoon for both days (P<0.05), but this was less evident in TRP-fed compared to CTL sows mainly on the morning following mixing (3.4 vs. 7.2±1.0, respectively; Trt∗period (day)=P<0.05). The average lesion score was lower in the anterior body region of TRP-fed compared to CTL sows (2.1 vs. 2.5±0.2; P<0.05), the most affected area during fights. The TRP-enriched diet reduced sow aggression while increasing behavioral activity, as evidenced by more time rooting and standing while sows had fewer offensive actions per agonistic interaction and lower skin lesion score 48h post-mixing. A TRP enriched diet provided to gestating sows for a short period prior to social mixing and continued for a short time after is an effective means of reducing aggression and improving the welfare of sows during group formation.


Subject(s)
Aggression/drug effects , Aggression/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Dietary Supplements , Tryptophan/administration & dosage , Animal Feed , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Female , Housing, Animal , Parity , Pregnancy , Serotonin/blood , Skin/injuries , Skin/pathology , Swine
3.
Physiol Behav ; 103(2): 188-96, 2011 05 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21281655

ABSTRACT

Understanding autonomic nervous system functioning, which mediates behavioral and physiological responses to stress, offers great potential for assessing farm animal stress and welfare. Evaluation of heart rate variability (HRV) and blood pressure variability (BPV), using time and frequency domain analyses may provide a sensitive and reliable measure of affective states and stress-mediated changes in sympathetic and parasympathetic tones. The aim of this research was to define low (LF) and high frequency (HF) power spectral ranges using pharmacological autonomic blockade, and to examine HRV and BPV parameter changes in response to atropine and propranolol in swine. Ten, 13-week old, barrows (n=6) and gilts (n=4) underwent surgery to place an intra-cardiac electrode and a blood pressure catheter attached to a biotelemetric transmitter; pigs had a 3-week recovery period prior to data collection. Each pig was subjected to administration of 4 intravenous (i.v.) drug treatments: a control treatment, 3 mL of saline, and 3 blockade treatments; 0.1 mg/kg of atropine, 1.0 mg/kg of propranolol, and .1 mg/kg of atropine together with 1.0 mg/kg of propranolol. All treatments were delivered by injection in the jugular vein with a minimum of 48 h between individual treatments. Behavior, ECG and blood pressure data were recorded continuously for a total of 1h, from 30 min pre-injection to 30 min post-injection. For data analyses, two 512-beat intervals were selected for each treatment while the pig was lying and inactive. The first interval was selected from the pre-injection period (baseline), and the second was selected between 10 and 30 min post-injection. Time and frequency domain (power spectral density) analyses were performed on each data interval. Subsequent, LF and HF bands from the power spectral densities were defined based on general linear and regression analyses. The HRV and BPV were computed with a covariate (baseline) factorial analysis of treatment by sex interaction, and day of injection, with mixed models and Tukey's post-hoc tests. The best-fit range for LF was 0.0-0.09 Hz, and HF was 0.09-2.0 Hz (r²: 0.41 and 0.43, respectively). Propranolol and saline injections led to a greater overall total power and overall higher inter-beat interval, HF and LF power. Atropine led to a dominant sympathovagal balance of the cardiac activity in pigs. In addition, atropine led to an increase in LF power of both systolic and diastolic blood pressures in gilts suggesting vagal tone mediation of BPV. The understanding of autonomic regulation of HRV and BPV in domestic swine facilitates our ability to detect and quantify stress responses, and broadens its application in assessing farm animal welfare.


Subject(s)
Atropine/pharmacology , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Blood Pressure/physiology , Electrocardiography, Ambulatory/statistics & numerical data , Heart Rate/physiology , Propranolol/pharmacology , Animals , Autonomic Nervous System/drug effects , Blood Pressure/drug effects , Electrocardiography, Ambulatory/methods , Heart Rate/drug effects , Swine , Telemetry/methods
4.
Brain Res ; 1381: 11-20, 2011 03 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21094150

ABSTRACT

Aggression is a major source of social stress with negative effects on health and well-being, yet limited information is known about the molecular mechanisms mediating aggressive behavior in swine. Ractopamine (RAC) is a ß-adrenoreceptor agonist that enhances growth but increases aggressive behaviors in female pigs. Thus, the effects of RAC, sex, and social rank on the mRNA abundance of genes encoding serotonin and dopamine receptors, and monoamine oxidase (MAO)-A in brains of sub-adult pigs were evaluated. Top dominant and bottom subordinate pigs (16/sex) in pens of 4 pigs were determined, and fed either the control or RAC diets. At day 31, their raphe nuclei (RN), amygdala (AMY), frontal cortex (FC), and hypothalamus (HYP) were dissected; relative mRNA abundance for 5-HT1(B), 5-HT2(A), 5-HT2(B), and D1 receptors, and MAO-A was determined by Q-RT-PCR and data subjected to multivariate linear mixed model analysis and Tukey post-hoc test. Expression of 5-HT1(B) and MAO-A was suppressed in the AMY of female pigs; 5-HT2(B) expression was also suppressed in the RN, FC and HYP of females and RN of dominant pigs (P < 0.05). Expression of 5-HT2(A) was more up-regulated in RN of females compared to males (P < 0.05). Expression of D1 varied in RN and FC mostly as a function of RAC feeding and its interaction with sex and social rank (P < 0.05). While RAC feeding is related to changes in expression of the D1 receptor mRNA, suppression in expression of serotonergic genes detected in the brain of pigs, especially in females independent of social rank, may be mediating the inter-individual offensive aggression.


Subject(s)
Adrenergic beta-Agonists/pharmacology , Brain/drug effects , Gene Expression/drug effects , Monoamine Oxidase/genetics , Phenethylamines/pharmacology , Receptors, Dopamine/genetics , Receptors, Serotonin/genetics , Age Factors , Aggression/drug effects , Aggression/physiology , Animals , Brain/metabolism , Dominance-Subordination , Female , Male , Monoamine Oxidase/metabolism , Multivariate Analysis , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Receptors, Dopamine/metabolism , Receptors, Serotonin/metabolism , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Sus scrofa
5.
Genomics ; 94(2): 146-52, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19422910

ABSTRACT

Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) is currently viewed as the most precise technique to quantify levels of messenger RNA. Relative quantification compares the expression of a target gene under two or more experimental conditions normalized to the measured expression of a control gene. The statistical methods and software currently available for the analysis of relative quantification of RT-PCR data lack the flexibility and statistical properties to produce valid inferences in a wide range of experimental situations. In this paper we present a novel method for the analysis of relative quantification of qRT-PCR data, which consists of the analysis of cycles to threshold values (C(T)) for a target and a control gene using a general linear mixed model methodology. Our method allows testing of a broader class of hypotheses than traditional analyses such as the classical comparative C(T). Moreover, a simulation study using plasmode datasets indicated that the estimated fold-change in pairwise comparisons was the same using either linear mixed models or a comparative C(T) method, but the linear mixed model approach was more powerful. In summary, the method presented in this paper is more accurate, powerful and flexible than the traditional methods for analysis of qRT-PCR data. This new method is especially useful for studies involving multiple experimental factors and complex designs.


Subject(s)
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction/statistics & numerical data , Computer Simulation , Gene Expression , Linear Models
6.
Ciênc. rural ; 34(2): 595-598, mar.-abr. 2004. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-359759

ABSTRACT

Dois mil cento e dezenove bovinos adultos pertencentes a 156 propriedades leiteiras distribuídas em 22 localizadas do município de Passo Fundo foram testados para tuberculose bovina (TB) e brucelose bovina (BB). A prevalência de anticorpos contra o vírus da diarréia viral bovina (BVDV), vírus da leucose enzoótica bovina (BLV) e herpesvírus bovino tipo 1 (BHV-1) foi estimada por amostragem aleatória em 28 dessas propriedades. Para tanto, considerou-se prevalência acima de 30 por cento para essas infecções e intervalo de confiança de 90 por cento, e sorteou-se 204 amostras de soro sangüíneo. Entre os 2.119 animais testados, 32 (1,51 por cento) foram positivos para TB e 26 (1,22 por cento) foram positivos para BB. Os exames sorológicos dos animais pertencentes às 28 propriedades indicaram animais positivos para BHV-1, BVDV e BLV em 22 (92,85 por cento), 19 (67,85 por cento) e 17 (60,71 por cento) propriedades, respectivamente; 11 (39,28 por cento) propriedades apresentaram animais soropositivos tanto para BHV-1, BVDV e BLV; em 1 (3,57 por cento) propriedade apenas todos os animais eram soronegativos para essas infecções.


Subject(s)
Cattle , Epidemiology , Tuberculosis
7.
Ciênc. rural ; 34(1): 285-287, jan.-fev. 2004. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-358346

ABSTRACT

Com o objetivo de determinar a prevalência de anticorpos contra o pneumovírus aviário, foram coletadas 960 amostras de soro sangüíneo de 48 lotes de frangos de corte (20 amostras/lote). Os lotes analisados eram provenientes de 23 municípios da regiäo do Planalto Médio. A detecçäo de anticorpos contra o pneumovírus foi feita através de um ensaio imunoenzimáticos comercial (ELISA). Entre as amostras analisadas, somente 5 (0,52 por cento) foram consideradas positivas para a presença de anticorpos contra o pneumovírus aviário. As amostras positivas encontravam-se em 5 (10,4 por cento) dos 48 lotes analisados e em 5 (21,74 por cento) municípios distintos. Considerando-se o baixo número de aves reagentes, pode-se especular que, na regiäo estudada, näo há pneumovírus aviário e que os frangos positivos poderiam ser considerados ôreatores únicosö.

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