Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens

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Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens. / Pedersen, Ida J.; Tahamtani, Fernanda M.; Forkman, Björn; Young, Jette F.; Poulsen, Hanne D.; Riber, Anja B.

In: Poultry Science, Vol. 99, No. 4, 2020, p. 1946-1955.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pedersen, IJ, Tahamtani, FM, Forkman, B, Young, JF, Poulsen, HD & Riber, AB 2020, 'Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens', Poultry Science, vol. 99, no. 4, pp. 1946-1955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061

APA

Pedersen, I. J., Tahamtani, F. M., Forkman, B., Young, J. F., Poulsen, H. D., & Riber, A. B. (2020). Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens. Poultry Science, 99(4), 1946-1955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061

Vancouver

Pedersen IJ, Tahamtani FM, Forkman B, Young JF, Poulsen HD, Riber AB. Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens. Poultry Science. 2020;99(4):1946-1955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061

Author

Pedersen, Ida J. ; Tahamtani, Fernanda M. ; Forkman, Björn ; Young, Jette F. ; Poulsen, Hanne D. ; Riber, Anja B. / Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens. In: Poultry Science. 2020 ; Vol. 99, No. 4. pp. 1946-1955.

Bibtex

@article{878a2079afcb4e60b172d70b3aa0d067,
title = "Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens",
abstract = "Providing environmental enrichment for broilers is a potential strategy to increase welfare, activity, and health. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of environmental enrichment on health and leg bone characteristics of broilers. One control and 8 types of enrichment were included: 2 distances between food and water (7 and 3.5 m), roughage, vertical panels, straw bales, 2 platforms (30 and 5 cm), and a lowered stocking density (34 kg/m2). Birds were kept according to conventional Danish guidelines. The study included 58 pens with approximately 500 birds each. On day 35 of age, 25 birds per pen were killed and included in a postmortem analysis of wooden breast, body condition scores, pathological conditions (femoral head necrosis, arthritis, tenosynovitis, fractures, tibial dyschondroplasia, and twisted tibiotarsus), muscle width of the lower leg, and tibiotarsus properties (bone strength, weight, length, and proximal diameter, middle diameter, and distal diameter). It was predicted that environmental enrichment would have a positive effect on pathology with the exceptions that environmental enrichment that increased activity would pose a risk factor for wooden breast development, and straw bales would be a risk factor for bacterial infections (arthritis, tenosynovitis, and femoral head necrosis). Furthermore, it was hypothesized that enriched groups would have increased muscle width, bone strength, and dimensions of the tibiotarsus. Broilers with 7 m between food and water had a longer distal diameter of the tibiotarsus than those with straw bales (P = 0.04). The birds provided with vertical panels had wider leg muscle than the treatments with roughage (P = 0.045), 3.5 m distance (P = 0.049), and straw bales (P = 0.044). No effects were found for the remaining outcomes. These results suggest that provision of vertical panels and increased distance between resources can result in larger muscle and bone dimension, possibly having a positive effect on leg health. Furthermore, the provision of environmental enrichment does not appear to be a risk factor for wooden breast or bacterial infection.",
keywords = "broiler chicken, environmental enrichment, leg health, pathology, welfare",
author = "Pedersen, {Ida J.} and Tahamtani, {Fernanda M.} and Bj{\"o}rn Forkman and Young, {Jette F.} and Poulsen, {Hanne D.} and Riber, {Anja B.}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061",
language = "English",
volume = "99",
pages = "1946--1955",
journal = "Poultry Science",
issn = "0032-5791",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of environmental enrichment on health and bone characteristics of fast growing broiler chickens

AU - Pedersen, Ida J.

AU - Tahamtani, Fernanda M.

AU - Forkman, Björn

AU - Young, Jette F.

AU - Poulsen, Hanne D.

AU - Riber, Anja B.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Providing environmental enrichment for broilers is a potential strategy to increase welfare, activity, and health. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of environmental enrichment on health and leg bone characteristics of broilers. One control and 8 types of enrichment were included: 2 distances between food and water (7 and 3.5 m), roughage, vertical panels, straw bales, 2 platforms (30 and 5 cm), and a lowered stocking density (34 kg/m2). Birds were kept according to conventional Danish guidelines. The study included 58 pens with approximately 500 birds each. On day 35 of age, 25 birds per pen were killed and included in a postmortem analysis of wooden breast, body condition scores, pathological conditions (femoral head necrosis, arthritis, tenosynovitis, fractures, tibial dyschondroplasia, and twisted tibiotarsus), muscle width of the lower leg, and tibiotarsus properties (bone strength, weight, length, and proximal diameter, middle diameter, and distal diameter). It was predicted that environmental enrichment would have a positive effect on pathology with the exceptions that environmental enrichment that increased activity would pose a risk factor for wooden breast development, and straw bales would be a risk factor for bacterial infections (arthritis, tenosynovitis, and femoral head necrosis). Furthermore, it was hypothesized that enriched groups would have increased muscle width, bone strength, and dimensions of the tibiotarsus. Broilers with 7 m between food and water had a longer distal diameter of the tibiotarsus than those with straw bales (P = 0.04). The birds provided with vertical panels had wider leg muscle than the treatments with roughage (P = 0.045), 3.5 m distance (P = 0.049), and straw bales (P = 0.044). No effects were found for the remaining outcomes. These results suggest that provision of vertical panels and increased distance between resources can result in larger muscle and bone dimension, possibly having a positive effect on leg health. Furthermore, the provision of environmental enrichment does not appear to be a risk factor for wooden breast or bacterial infection.

AB - Providing environmental enrichment for broilers is a potential strategy to increase welfare, activity, and health. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of environmental enrichment on health and leg bone characteristics of broilers. One control and 8 types of enrichment were included: 2 distances between food and water (7 and 3.5 m), roughage, vertical panels, straw bales, 2 platforms (30 and 5 cm), and a lowered stocking density (34 kg/m2). Birds were kept according to conventional Danish guidelines. The study included 58 pens with approximately 500 birds each. On day 35 of age, 25 birds per pen were killed and included in a postmortem analysis of wooden breast, body condition scores, pathological conditions (femoral head necrosis, arthritis, tenosynovitis, fractures, tibial dyschondroplasia, and twisted tibiotarsus), muscle width of the lower leg, and tibiotarsus properties (bone strength, weight, length, and proximal diameter, middle diameter, and distal diameter). It was predicted that environmental enrichment would have a positive effect on pathology with the exceptions that environmental enrichment that increased activity would pose a risk factor for wooden breast development, and straw bales would be a risk factor for bacterial infections (arthritis, tenosynovitis, and femoral head necrosis). Furthermore, it was hypothesized that enriched groups would have increased muscle width, bone strength, and dimensions of the tibiotarsus. Broilers with 7 m between food and water had a longer distal diameter of the tibiotarsus than those with straw bales (P = 0.04). The birds provided with vertical panels had wider leg muscle than the treatments with roughage (P = 0.045), 3.5 m distance (P = 0.049), and straw bales (P = 0.044). No effects were found for the remaining outcomes. These results suggest that provision of vertical panels and increased distance between resources can result in larger muscle and bone dimension, possibly having a positive effect on leg health. Furthermore, the provision of environmental enrichment does not appear to be a risk factor for wooden breast or bacterial infection.

KW - broiler chicken

KW - environmental enrichment

KW - leg health

KW - pathology

KW - welfare

U2 - 10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061

DO - 10.1016/j.psj.2019.11.061

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32241475

AN - SCOPUS:85079832493

VL - 99

SP - 1946

EP - 1955

JO - Poultry Science

JF - Poultry Science

SN - 0032-5791

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 240146170