Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing

Early life experiences can affect social behaviour in later life, but opportunities for socio-behavioural development are often overlooked in current husbandry practices. This experiment investigated the effects of rearing piglets in two-stage group lactation (GL) system from 7 or 14 days of age on...

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Main Authors: M. Verdon, R.S. Morrison, J.-L. Rault
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731119000478
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spelling doaj-18b6439e475d458eb74bdc8399ba6f022021-06-06T04:56:05ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112019-01-01131023272335Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housingM. Verdon0R.S. Morrison1J.-L. Rault2Animal Welfare Science Centre, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, AustraliaRivalea Australia, Corowa, NSW 2646, AustraliaAnimal Welfare Science Centre, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, AustraliaEarly life experiences can affect social behaviour in later life, but opportunities for socio-behavioural development are often overlooked in current husbandry practices. This experiment investigated the effects of rearing piglets in two-stage group lactation (GL) system from 7 or 14 days of age on piglet aggression at weaning. Three lactation housing treatments were applied to a total of 198 piglets from 30 litters of multiparous sows. All dams farrowed in standard farrowing crates (FCs). Group lactation litters were transferred with their dam at 7 (GL7) or 14 days (GL14) postpartum to GL pens (one pen of five sows at 8.4 m2/sow and one pen of seven sows at 8.1 m2/sow, per GL treatment). Farrowing crate litters remained with their dam in a single litter until weaning. At weaning, 10 to 14 piglets from two unfamiliar litters from the same housing treatment were mixed into pens (n=5 pens/treatment) and their behaviour was continuously recorded for 3.5 h. For each pen, the frequency of aggressive bouts (reciprocal and non-reciprocal aggression lasting <5 s), the frequency and duration of fights (reciprocal aggression lasting ⩾5 s) and bullying events (non-reciprocal aggression lasting ⩾5 s) were recorded, along with whether interactions involved familiar or unfamiliar piglets. Aggressive bouts delivered by FC piglets were approximately 1.5 and 3.0 times more frequent than that delivered by GL7 and GL14 piglets, respectively (40.5, 16.7 and 9.9 bouts/pig, respectively; P<0.05). Fighting was more frequent (1.6, 0.3 and 0.4 fights/pig, respectively; P<0.001) and fights were longer (83, 15 and 32 s fight/pig, respectively; P<0.001) between FC piglets than between GL7 or GL14 piglets. Bullying did not differ between housing treatments (P>0.05). GL7 and GL14 piglets engaged in a similar number of fights with unfamiliar as familiar piglets, but FC piglets had almost three times as many fights with unfamiliar than with familiar piglets (P<0.05). This experiment confirms the benefits of GL housing for pig social development. Further investigation is required to determine whether mixing before 14 days postpartum has implications for other indicators of animal welfare and productivity in a two-stage GL housing system.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731119000478animal welfarebehavioural developmentearly lifeontogenysocialisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Verdon
R.S. Morrison
J.-L. Rault
spellingShingle M. Verdon
R.S. Morrison
J.-L. Rault
Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
Animal
animal welfare
behavioural development
early life
ontogeny
socialisation
author_facet M. Verdon
R.S. Morrison
J.-L. Rault
author_sort M. Verdon
title Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
title_short Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
title_full Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
title_fullStr Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
title_full_unstemmed Group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
title_sort group lactation from 7 or 14 days of age reduces piglet aggression at weaning compared to farrowing crate housing
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Early life experiences can affect social behaviour in later life, but opportunities for socio-behavioural development are often overlooked in current husbandry practices. This experiment investigated the effects of rearing piglets in two-stage group lactation (GL) system from 7 or 14 days of age on piglet aggression at weaning. Three lactation housing treatments were applied to a total of 198 piglets from 30 litters of multiparous sows. All dams farrowed in standard farrowing crates (FCs). Group lactation litters were transferred with their dam at 7 (GL7) or 14 days (GL14) postpartum to GL pens (one pen of five sows at 8.4 m2/sow and one pen of seven sows at 8.1 m2/sow, per GL treatment). Farrowing crate litters remained with their dam in a single litter until weaning. At weaning, 10 to 14 piglets from two unfamiliar litters from the same housing treatment were mixed into pens (n=5 pens/treatment) and their behaviour was continuously recorded for 3.5 h. For each pen, the frequency of aggressive bouts (reciprocal and non-reciprocal aggression lasting <5 s), the frequency and duration of fights (reciprocal aggression lasting ⩾5 s) and bullying events (non-reciprocal aggression lasting ⩾5 s) were recorded, along with whether interactions involved familiar or unfamiliar piglets. Aggressive bouts delivered by FC piglets were approximately 1.5 and 3.0 times more frequent than that delivered by GL7 and GL14 piglets, respectively (40.5, 16.7 and 9.9 bouts/pig, respectively; P<0.05). Fighting was more frequent (1.6, 0.3 and 0.4 fights/pig, respectively; P<0.001) and fights were longer (83, 15 and 32 s fight/pig, respectively; P<0.001) between FC piglets than between GL7 or GL14 piglets. Bullying did not differ between housing treatments (P>0.05). GL7 and GL14 piglets engaged in a similar number of fights with unfamiliar as familiar piglets, but FC piglets had almost three times as many fights with unfamiliar than with familiar piglets (P<0.05). This experiment confirms the benefits of GL housing for pig social development. Further investigation is required to determine whether mixing before 14 days postpartum has implications for other indicators of animal welfare and productivity in a two-stage GL housing system.
topic animal welfare
behavioural development
early life
ontogeny
socialisation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731119000478
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