Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs. / Lahrmann, Helle Pelant; Hansen, Christian Fink; D'Eath, Rick; Busch, Marie Erika; Forkman, Björn.

In: Applied Animal Behaviour Science, Vol. 29-35, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lahrmann, HP, Hansen, CF, D'Eath, R, Busch, ME & Forkman, B 2018, 'Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs', Applied Animal Behaviour Science, vol. 29-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006

APA

Lahrmann, H. P., Hansen, C. F., D'Eath, R., Busch, M. E., & Forkman, B. (2018). Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs. Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 29-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006

Vancouver

Lahrmann HP, Hansen CF, D'Eath R, Busch ME, Forkman B. Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs. Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 2018;29-35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006

Author

Lahrmann, Helle Pelant ; Hansen, Christian Fink ; D'Eath, Rick ; Busch, Marie Erika ; Forkman, Björn. / Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs. In: Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 2018 ; Vol. 29-35.

Bibtex

@article{724ac9dbba2742ee90a740655362142b,
title = "Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs",
abstract = "Detecting a tail biting outbreak early is essential to reduce the risk of pigs getting severe tail damage. A few previous studies suggest that tail posture and behavioural differences can predict an upcoming outbreak. The aim of the present study was therefore to investigate if differences in tail posture and behaviour could be detected at pen level between upcoming tail biting pens (T-pens) and control pens (C-pens). The study included 2301 undocked weaner pigs in 74 pens (mean 31.1 pigs/pen; SD 1.5). Tails were scored three times weekly (wound freshness, wound severity and tail length) between 07:00 h-14:00 h from weaning until a tail biting outbreak. An outbreak (day 0) occurred when at least four pigs had a tail damage, regardless of wound freshness. On average 7.6 (SD 4.3) pigs had a damaged tail (scratches + wound) in T-pens on day 0. Tail posture and behaviour (activity, eating, explorative, pen mate and tail directed behaviour) were recorded in T-pens and in matched C-pens using scan sampling every half hour between 0800-1100 h 1700-2000 h on day -3, -2 and -1 prior to the tail biting outbreak in T-pens. Further, to investigate if changes in tail posture could be a measure for use under commercial conditions, tail posture was recorded by direct observation from outside the pen. The live observations were carried out just before tail scoring on each observation day until the outbreak. The video results showed more hanging/tucked tails in T-pens than in C-pens on each recording day (P < 0.001). In T-pens more tails were hanging on day -1 (33.2%) than on day -2 (24.8%) and day -3 (23.1%). Further, the number of tail damaged pigs on day 0 was correlated with tail posture on day -1, with more tails hanging in pens with 6-8 and >8 tail damaged pigs than in pens with 4-5 tail damaged pigs (P < 0.001). Live observations of tail posture in T-pens also showed a higher prevalence of hanging tails on day 0 (30.0%; P < 0.05) than on day -3/-2 (17.2%), -5/-4 (15.4%) and -7/-6 (13.0%). No differences in any of the recorded behaviours were observed between T-pens and C-pens. In conclusion, lowered tails seem to be a promising and practical measure to detect damaging tail biting behaviour on pen level even when using live observations. However, there were no changes in activity, eating, exploration or tail-directed behaviours prior to a tail biting outbreak.",
keywords = "Behavioural change, Pigs, Tail biting, Tail damage, Tail posture",
author = "Lahrmann, {Helle Pelant} and Hansen, {Christian Fink} and Rick D'Eath and Busch, {Marie Erika} and Bj{\"o}rn Forkman",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006",
language = "English",
volume = "29-35",
journal = "Applied Animal Behaviour Science",
issn = "0168-1591",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tail posture predicts tail biting outbreaks at pen level in weaner pigs

AU - Lahrmann, Helle Pelant

AU - Hansen, Christian Fink

AU - D'Eath, Rick

AU - Busch, Marie Erika

AU - Forkman, Björn

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Detecting a tail biting outbreak early is essential to reduce the risk of pigs getting severe tail damage. A few previous studies suggest that tail posture and behavioural differences can predict an upcoming outbreak. The aim of the present study was therefore to investigate if differences in tail posture and behaviour could be detected at pen level between upcoming tail biting pens (T-pens) and control pens (C-pens). The study included 2301 undocked weaner pigs in 74 pens (mean 31.1 pigs/pen; SD 1.5). Tails were scored three times weekly (wound freshness, wound severity and tail length) between 07:00 h-14:00 h from weaning until a tail biting outbreak. An outbreak (day 0) occurred when at least four pigs had a tail damage, regardless of wound freshness. On average 7.6 (SD 4.3) pigs had a damaged tail (scratches + wound) in T-pens on day 0. Tail posture and behaviour (activity, eating, explorative, pen mate and tail directed behaviour) were recorded in T-pens and in matched C-pens using scan sampling every half hour between 0800-1100 h 1700-2000 h on day -3, -2 and -1 prior to the tail biting outbreak in T-pens. Further, to investigate if changes in tail posture could be a measure for use under commercial conditions, tail posture was recorded by direct observation from outside the pen. The live observations were carried out just before tail scoring on each observation day until the outbreak. The video results showed more hanging/tucked tails in T-pens than in C-pens on each recording day (P < 0.001). In T-pens more tails were hanging on day -1 (33.2%) than on day -2 (24.8%) and day -3 (23.1%). Further, the number of tail damaged pigs on day 0 was correlated with tail posture on day -1, with more tails hanging in pens with 6-8 and >8 tail damaged pigs than in pens with 4-5 tail damaged pigs (P < 0.001). Live observations of tail posture in T-pens also showed a higher prevalence of hanging tails on day 0 (30.0%; P < 0.05) than on day -3/-2 (17.2%), -5/-4 (15.4%) and -7/-6 (13.0%). No differences in any of the recorded behaviours were observed between T-pens and C-pens. In conclusion, lowered tails seem to be a promising and practical measure to detect damaging tail biting behaviour on pen level even when using live observations. However, there were no changes in activity, eating, exploration or tail-directed behaviours prior to a tail biting outbreak.

AB - Detecting a tail biting outbreak early is essential to reduce the risk of pigs getting severe tail damage. A few previous studies suggest that tail posture and behavioural differences can predict an upcoming outbreak. The aim of the present study was therefore to investigate if differences in tail posture and behaviour could be detected at pen level between upcoming tail biting pens (T-pens) and control pens (C-pens). The study included 2301 undocked weaner pigs in 74 pens (mean 31.1 pigs/pen; SD 1.5). Tails were scored three times weekly (wound freshness, wound severity and tail length) between 07:00 h-14:00 h from weaning until a tail biting outbreak. An outbreak (day 0) occurred when at least four pigs had a tail damage, regardless of wound freshness. On average 7.6 (SD 4.3) pigs had a damaged tail (scratches + wound) in T-pens on day 0. Tail posture and behaviour (activity, eating, explorative, pen mate and tail directed behaviour) were recorded in T-pens and in matched C-pens using scan sampling every half hour between 0800-1100 h 1700-2000 h on day -3, -2 and -1 prior to the tail biting outbreak in T-pens. Further, to investigate if changes in tail posture could be a measure for use under commercial conditions, tail posture was recorded by direct observation from outside the pen. The live observations were carried out just before tail scoring on each observation day until the outbreak. The video results showed more hanging/tucked tails in T-pens than in C-pens on each recording day (P < 0.001). In T-pens more tails were hanging on day -1 (33.2%) than on day -2 (24.8%) and day -3 (23.1%). Further, the number of tail damaged pigs on day 0 was correlated with tail posture on day -1, with more tails hanging in pens with 6-8 and >8 tail damaged pigs than in pens with 4-5 tail damaged pigs (P < 0.001). Live observations of tail posture in T-pens also showed a higher prevalence of hanging tails on day 0 (30.0%; P < 0.05) than on day -3/-2 (17.2%), -5/-4 (15.4%) and -7/-6 (13.0%). No differences in any of the recorded behaviours were observed between T-pens and C-pens. In conclusion, lowered tails seem to be a promising and practical measure to detect damaging tail biting behaviour on pen level even when using live observations. However, there were no changes in activity, eating, exploration or tail-directed behaviours prior to a tail biting outbreak.

KW - Behavioural change

KW - Pigs

KW - Tail biting

KW - Tail damage

KW - Tail posture

U2 - 10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006

DO - 10.1016/j.applanim.2017.12.006

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85038826745

VL - 29-35

JO - Applied Animal Behaviour Science

JF - Applied Animal Behaviour Science

SN - 0168-1591

ER -

ID: 187623638