The effect of breed on the development of adverse social behaviours in pigs

Autor: V. E. Beattie, M.E.M. Sutcliffe, K.A. Rance, Ian Sneddon, J.T. Mercer, K. Breuer, Sandra Edwards
Rok vydání: 2003
Předmět:
Zdroj: Applied Animal Behaviour Science. 84:59-74
ISSN: 0168-1591
DOI: 10.1016/s0168-1591(03)00147-3
Popis: Tail-biting and other harmful social behaviours are a common problem on pig farms. The aims of the current experiment were (1) to investigate the genetic component of harmful social behaviours such as tail-biting by assessing breed differences, and (2) to further investigate the reliability and predictability of a test, ‘the tail-chew test’, previously identified as potentially being capable of predicting a pig’s predisposition for tail- and ear-biting. The behaviour of three pig breeds (Large White (LW), Landrace (LR), Duroc (DR)), with 100 pigs per breed, was observed in a ‘tail-chew test’, and by observing the performance of harmful social behaviour directed to pen mates in flat deck pens after weaning. The tail-chew test, carried out on two consecutive days pre-weaning, involved observing the behaviour of individual pigs towards two suspended ropes. Pigs were weaned at 28 days and the occurrence of harmful social behaviour was recorded 4 weeks later over 2 consecutive days (1 h per day) using a group ‘period occurrence’ scanning method. Breed had a significant effect on rope-directed behaviour in the tail-chew test and on harmful social behaviour. DR pigs interacted with the ropes in the tail-chew test more often (median 23.0 vs 19.0 and 17.5 times in 20 min, P
Databáze: OpenAIRE