Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?

We know a good deal about brain lateralization in birds and a good deal about animal welfare, but relatively little about whether there is a noteworthy relationship between avian welfare and brain lateralization. In birds, the left hemisphere is specialised to categorise stimuli and to discriminate...

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Main Authors: Lesley J. Rogers, Gisela Kaplan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Symmetry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/11/8/1043
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spelling doaj-05721bc71f874cc292254f70209cf5db2020-11-25T01:55:14ZengMDPI AGSymmetry2073-89942019-08-01118104310.3390/sym11081043sym11081043Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?Lesley J. Rogers0Gisela Kaplan1School of Science and Technology, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, AustraliaSchool of Science and Technology, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, AustraliaWe know a good deal about brain lateralization in birds and a good deal about animal welfare, but relatively little about whether there is a noteworthy relationship between avian welfare and brain lateralization. In birds, the left hemisphere is specialised to categorise stimuli and to discriminate preferred categories from distracting stimuli (e.g., food from an array of inedible objects), whereas the right hemisphere responds to small differences between stimuli, controls social behaviour, detects predators and controls attack, fear and escape responses. In this paper, we concentrate on visual lateralization and the effect of light exposure of the avian embryo on the development of lateralization, and we consider its role in the welfare of birds after hatching. Findings suggest that light-exposure during incubation has a general positive effect on post-hatching behaviour, likely because it facilitates control of behaviour by the left hemisphere, which can suppress fear and other distress behaviour controlled by the right hemisphere. In this context, particular attention needs to be paid to the influence of corticosterone, a stress hormone, on lateralization. Welfare of animals in captivity, as is well known, has two cornerstones: enrichment and reduction of stress. What is less well-known is the link between the influence of experience on brain lateralization and its consequent positive or negative outcomes on behaviour. We conclude that the welfare of birds may be diminished by failure to expose the developing embryos to light but we also recognise that more research on the association between lateralization and welfare is needed.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/11/8/1043lateralizationbirdsvisual behaviourlight exposuredevelopmentcorticosteronewelfare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lesley J. Rogers
Gisela Kaplan
spellingShingle Lesley J. Rogers
Gisela Kaplan
Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
Symmetry
lateralization
birds
visual behaviour
light exposure
development
corticosterone
welfare
author_facet Lesley J. Rogers
Gisela Kaplan
author_sort Lesley J. Rogers
title Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
title_short Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
title_full Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
title_fullStr Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
title_full_unstemmed Does Functional Lateralization in Birds Have any Implications for Their Welfare?
title_sort does functional lateralization in birds have any implications for their welfare?
publisher MDPI AG
series Symmetry
issn 2073-8994
publishDate 2019-08-01
description We know a good deal about brain lateralization in birds and a good deal about animal welfare, but relatively little about whether there is a noteworthy relationship between avian welfare and brain lateralization. In birds, the left hemisphere is specialised to categorise stimuli and to discriminate preferred categories from distracting stimuli (e.g., food from an array of inedible objects), whereas the right hemisphere responds to small differences between stimuli, controls social behaviour, detects predators and controls attack, fear and escape responses. In this paper, we concentrate on visual lateralization and the effect of light exposure of the avian embryo on the development of lateralization, and we consider its role in the welfare of birds after hatching. Findings suggest that light-exposure during incubation has a general positive effect on post-hatching behaviour, likely because it facilitates control of behaviour by the left hemisphere, which can suppress fear and other distress behaviour controlled by the right hemisphere. In this context, particular attention needs to be paid to the influence of corticosterone, a stress hormone, on lateralization. Welfare of animals in captivity, as is well known, has two cornerstones: enrichment and reduction of stress. What is less well-known is the link between the influence of experience on brain lateralization and its consequent positive or negative outcomes on behaviour. We conclude that the welfare of birds may be diminished by failure to expose the developing embryos to light but we also recognise that more research on the association between lateralization and welfare is needed.
topic lateralization
birds
visual behaviour
light exposure
development
corticosterone
welfare
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/11/8/1043
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