Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli

Physiological, behavioral and production traits of White Leghorn cockerels from lines selected for high and low antibody response to sheep red blood cell antigen were measured to 70 days of age in several husbandry settings. Chicks were reared in pens with wood shavings, in windowless rooms, with co...

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Main Author: Metz, John Michael
Other Authors: Poultry Science
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101129
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-1011292021-01-13T05:33:48Z Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli Metz, John Michael Poultry Science LD5655.V855 1986.M479 Chickens -- Breeding Poultry -- Behavior Physiological, behavioral and production traits of White Leghorn cockerels from lines selected for high and low antibody response to sheep red blood cell antigen were measured to 70 days of age in several husbandry settings. Chicks were reared in pens with wood shavings, in windowless rooms, with continuous light and feed and water available <i>ad libitum</i>. Socialization, to enhance chicken-human relationships, and auditory playbacks of contentment calls were used as husbandry procedures in the context of environmental enrichment. Socialization involved gentle handling of a sample of the birds while playbacks were of 30 minute duration. Both were conducted three times per week with socialization performed from 1 to 28 days and playbacks from 1 to 70 days of age. The experiment was a 2 x 2 x 2 factorial with two stocks, socialization-nonsocialization and playback-no playback. To minimize extraneous effects, the area where the flocks were located was restricted to personnel involved specifically with this experiment. That is, the same individual (usually John Michael Metz) who obtained the data also performed the routine husbandry. None of the husbandry settings appeared to create a stress as measured by heterophil/lymphocyte ratios and production of antibody to sheep erythrocytes. Behavioral and production criteria showed that chicks responded favorably toward socialization and playbacks as measured by feed conversion and comfort scores, with the effects of the stimuli paralleling each other. The lack of additivity suggests an optimum intermediate of stimuli. Contentment to distress call ratios decreased with age. Concomitantly there were increases in social encounters among flock-mates which were probably associated with the formation of peck-rights. Genotype by husbandry setting interactions were fairly common suggesting that the degree of response to these stimuli varies among populations. This result was not surprising because of the intense selection in closed chicken populations. The data suggest that playbacks of contentment calls or enhancement of the chicken-human relationships can increase the well-being of young flocks of chickens. The degree of response, however, may vary among populations. M.S. 2020-12-14T16:34:32Z 2020-12-14T16:34:32Z 1986 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101129 en OCLC# 15170622 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ v, 59 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1986.M479
Chickens -- Breeding
Poultry -- Behavior
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1986.M479
Chickens -- Breeding
Poultry -- Behavior
Metz, John Michael
Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
description Physiological, behavioral and production traits of White Leghorn cockerels from lines selected for high and low antibody response to sheep red blood cell antigen were measured to 70 days of age in several husbandry settings. Chicks were reared in pens with wood shavings, in windowless rooms, with continuous light and feed and water available <i>ad libitum</i>. Socialization, to enhance chicken-human relationships, and auditory playbacks of contentment calls were used as husbandry procedures in the context of environmental enrichment. Socialization involved gentle handling of a sample of the birds while playbacks were of 30 minute duration. Both were conducted three times per week with socialization performed from 1 to 28 days and playbacks from 1 to 70 days of age. The experiment was a 2 x 2 x 2 factorial with two stocks, socialization-nonsocialization and playback-no playback. To minimize extraneous effects, the area where the flocks were located was restricted to personnel involved specifically with this experiment. That is, the same individual (usually John Michael Metz) who obtained the data also performed the routine husbandry. None of the husbandry settings appeared to create a stress as measured by heterophil/lymphocyte ratios and production of antibody to sheep erythrocytes. Behavioral and production criteria showed that chicks responded favorably toward socialization and playbacks as measured by feed conversion and comfort scores, with the effects of the stimuli paralleling each other. The lack of additivity suggests an optimum intermediate of stimuli. Contentment to distress call ratios decreased with age. Concomitantly there were increases in social encounters among flock-mates which were probably associated with the formation of peck-rights. Genotype by husbandry setting interactions were fairly common suggesting that the degree of response to these stimuli varies among populations. This result was not surprising because of the intense selection in closed chicken populations. The data suggest that playbacks of contentment calls or enhancement of the chicken-human relationships can increase the well-being of young flocks of chickens. The degree of response, however, may vary among populations. === M.S.
author2 Poultry Science
author_facet Poultry Science
Metz, John Michael
author Metz, John Michael
author_sort Metz, John Michael
title Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
title_short Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
title_full Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
title_fullStr Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
title_full_unstemmed Physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
title_sort physiological and behavioral responses of genetic lines of chickens to physical and auditory stimuli
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101129
work_keys_str_mv AT metzjohnmichael physiologicalandbehavioralresponsesofgeneticlinesofchickenstophysicalandauditorystimuli
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