Alternatives to nose-ringing in outdoor sows: the provision of root crops

Applied Animal Behaviour Science(2005)

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摘要
The practice of nose-ringing outdoor pigs has been questioned on ethical grounds, although nose-rings are widely used commercially to reduce the pasture damage that is caused by indiscriminate rooting of the paddock. Nose-rings have been proven to reduce the occurrence of such behaviours, and this is suggested as being due to the discomfort that is felt each time the snout comes into contact with a hard surface. The aim of this experiment was to seek a successful alternative to this practice. Sixteen multiparous sows were housed in groups of four and randomly allocated to one of the four dietary treatments in a 4×4 Latin square design. Treatment A acted as a control and had no rooting area in the paddock; treatments B–D were all provided with a rooting area consisting of a 15m×2m strip of ploughed land (total paddock area 35m×33m). Sows in treatment B received 5kg of swedes/sow (Brassica napus L. var. napobrassica) spread over the surface of the paddock in addition to their daily concentrate feed ration. Treatment C received 5kg of swedes/sow buried in the rooting area, again in addition to their daily ration of concentrate feed. Sows on treatment D also received 5kg swedes/sows buried in the rooting area, but in this treatment the concentrate ration was reduced by 0.5kg/sow to provide a complete diet isoenergetic to that offered to the control sows.
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关键词
Animal welfare,Nose-ringing,Pig,Rooting behaviour,Pasture damage,Swede (Brassica napus L. var. napobrassica)
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