Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season

Experiments were carried out with the aim of investigating the modulatory role of ascorbic acid (AA) on responses to 8-h road transportation, covering a distance of 260 km at a speed of 40 - 50 km/h, during the harmattan season. Twentynine adult local pigs aged 9 - 12 months served as subjects. Seve...

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Main Author: Yahaya Adeshina Adenkola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Veterinary World 2011-01-01
Series:Veterinary World
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1307195872.pdf
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spelling doaj-9678aa5f7cab4e3a9f89d374887b47522021-08-02T06:44:54ZengVeterinary WorldVeterinary World0972-89882231-09162011-01-0148.000353357Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan SeasonYahaya Adeshina AdenkolaExperiments were carried out with the aim of investigating the modulatory role of ascorbic acid (AA) on responses to 8-h road transportation, covering a distance of 260 km at a speed of 40 - 50 km/h, during the harmattan season. Twentynine adult local pigs aged 9 - 12 months served as subjects. Seventeen pigs administered with AA, prior to the transportation, at the dose of 250 mg/kg orally and individually served as experimental animals, and 12 others administered orally with sterile water were used as control animals. The behavioural activities of pigs which included resting (that is, either lying down or standing idle), defaecating, urinating, sniffing, threats of attack (fight), attempts to escape, mounting on one another, hurdling together and routing the floor were monitored with the aid of a video camera without the pigs knowing that they were being observed. Recordings were done based on the number of pigs found performing each activity within 30 min of direct observation, alternated by 30 min of rest and this continued for a period of 4 h. The tape was later watched, analysed and the number of pigs exhibiting each behavioural activity was recorded. Post-transportation, the behavioural activities of standing (94.1 ± 5.8 %), aggressiveness indicated by the percentage of pigs involved in fighting (23.5 ± 6.00 %) and attempts to escape (66.67 ± 14.21 %) were higher in experimental pigs (P< 0.05) post-transportation than control pigs with the corresponding values of 25.00 ± 3.00 %; 0.00 % and 35.29 ± 11.95 %, respectively. The results showed that road transportation induced considerable behavioural stress resulting in depression of the central nervous system. AA administration pre-transportation reduced the manifestation of stressful behavioural activities in experimental pigs following road transportation. In conclusion, long-term road transportation of pigs during the harmattan season induces behavioural stress, alleviated by AA administration. [Vet. World 2011; 4(8.000): 353-357]http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1307195872.pdfAscorbic acidBehavioural responsesHarmattan seasonPigsRoad transportation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yahaya Adeshina Adenkola
spellingShingle Yahaya Adeshina Adenkola
Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
Veterinary World
Ascorbic acid
Behavioural responses
Harmattan season
Pigs
Road transportation
author_facet Yahaya Adeshina Adenkola
author_sort Yahaya Adeshina Adenkola
title Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
title_short Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
title_full Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
title_fullStr Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
title_full_unstemmed Behavioural Responses in Pigs administered with Ascorbic acid and Transported by Road for Eight Hours during the Harmattan Season
title_sort behavioural responses in pigs administered with ascorbic acid and transported by road for eight hours during the harmattan season
publisher Veterinary World
series Veterinary World
issn 0972-8988
2231-0916
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Experiments were carried out with the aim of investigating the modulatory role of ascorbic acid (AA) on responses to 8-h road transportation, covering a distance of 260 km at a speed of 40 - 50 km/h, during the harmattan season. Twentynine adult local pigs aged 9 - 12 months served as subjects. Seventeen pigs administered with AA, prior to the transportation, at the dose of 250 mg/kg orally and individually served as experimental animals, and 12 others administered orally with sterile water were used as control animals. The behavioural activities of pigs which included resting (that is, either lying down or standing idle), defaecating, urinating, sniffing, threats of attack (fight), attempts to escape, mounting on one another, hurdling together and routing the floor were monitored with the aid of a video camera without the pigs knowing that they were being observed. Recordings were done based on the number of pigs found performing each activity within 30 min of direct observation, alternated by 30 min of rest and this continued for a period of 4 h. The tape was later watched, analysed and the number of pigs exhibiting each behavioural activity was recorded. Post-transportation, the behavioural activities of standing (94.1 ± 5.8 %), aggressiveness indicated by the percentage of pigs involved in fighting (23.5 ± 6.00 %) and attempts to escape (66.67 ± 14.21 %) were higher in experimental pigs (P< 0.05) post-transportation than control pigs with the corresponding values of 25.00 ± 3.00 %; 0.00 % and 35.29 ± 11.95 %, respectively. The results showed that road transportation induced considerable behavioural stress resulting in depression of the central nervous system. AA administration pre-transportation reduced the manifestation of stressful behavioural activities in experimental pigs following road transportation. In conclusion, long-term road transportation of pigs during the harmattan season induces behavioural stress, alleviated by AA administration. [Vet. World 2011; 4(8.000): 353-357]
topic Ascorbic acid
Behavioural responses
Harmattan season
Pigs
Road transportation
url http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1307195872.pdf
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