Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture
The use of non-slip surfaces during loading and unloading of finishing pigs plays an important role in animal welfare and economics of the pork industry. Currently, the guidelines available only suggest the use of ramps with a slope below 20 degrees to load and unload pigs. However, the total time i...
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2014-12-01
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doaj-ac67cf83bd824165bc7aa03e86450fd12020-11-24T23:46:44ZengMDPI AGAnimals2076-26152014-12-0151132610.3390/ani5010013ani5010013Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding MoistureArlene Garcia0John J. McGlone1Department of Animal and Food Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409, USADepartment of Animal and Food Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409, USAThe use of non-slip surfaces during loading and unloading of finishing pigs plays an important role in animal welfare and economics of the pork industry. Currently, the guidelines available only suggest the use of ramps with a slope below 20 degrees to load and unload pigs. However, the total time it takes to load and unload animals and slips, falls, and vocalizations are a welfare concern. Three ramp angles (0, 10 or 20 degrees), five bedding materials (nothing, sand, feed, wood shavings or wheat straw hay), two moistures (dry or wet bedding, >50% moisture) over two seasons (>23.9 °C summer, <23.9 °C winter) were assessed for slips/falls/vocalizations (n = 2400 pig observations) and analyzed with a scoring system. The use of bedding during summer or winter played a role in the total time it took to load and unload the ramp (p < 0.05). Bedding, bedding moisture, season, and slope significantly interacted to impact the total time to load and unload finishing pigs (p < 0.05). Heart rate and the total time it took to load and unload the ramp increased as the slope of the ramp increased (p < 0.05). Heart rates were higher during the summer than winter, and summer heart rates increased as the slope increased (p < 0.05). The current study suggests that several factors should be considered in combination to identify the appropriate bedding for the specific occasion.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/5/1/13finishing pigsrampslipsfallsvocalizationsanimal welfare |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Arlene Garcia John J. McGlone |
spellingShingle |
Arlene Garcia John J. McGlone Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture Animals finishing pigs ramp slips falls vocalizations animal welfare |
author_facet |
Arlene Garcia John J. McGlone |
author_sort |
Arlene Garcia |
title |
Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture |
title_short |
Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture |
title_full |
Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture |
title_fullStr |
Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture |
title_full_unstemmed |
Loading and Unloading Finishing Pigs: Effects of Bedding Types, Ramp Angle, and Bedding Moisture |
title_sort |
loading and unloading finishing pigs: effects of bedding types, ramp angle, and bedding moisture |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Animals |
issn |
2076-2615 |
publishDate |
2014-12-01 |
description |
The use of non-slip surfaces during loading and unloading of finishing pigs plays an important role in animal welfare and economics of the pork industry. Currently, the guidelines available only suggest the use of ramps with a slope below 20 degrees to load and unload pigs. However, the total time it takes to load and unload animals and slips, falls, and vocalizations are a welfare concern. Three ramp angles (0, 10 or 20 degrees), five bedding materials (nothing, sand, feed, wood shavings or wheat straw hay), two moistures (dry or wet bedding, >50% moisture) over two seasons (>23.9 °C summer, <23.9 °C winter) were assessed for slips/falls/vocalizations (n = 2400 pig observations) and analyzed with a scoring system. The use of bedding during summer or winter played a role in the total time it took to load and unload the ramp (p < 0.05). Bedding, bedding moisture, season, and slope significantly interacted to impact the total time to load and unload finishing pigs (p < 0.05). Heart rate and the total time it took to load and unload the ramp increased as the slope of the ramp increased (p < 0.05). Heart rates were higher during the summer than winter, and summer heart rates increased as the slope increased (p < 0.05). The current study suggests that several factors should be considered in combination to identify the appropriate bedding for the specific occasion. |
topic |
finishing pigs ramp slips falls vocalizations animal welfare |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/5/1/13 |
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