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Enriched Cages

Impact of Stocking Density and Group Size in Enriched Cage Housing on Hen Behavior, Welfare and Performance Tina Widowski 1 ; Linda Caston 1 ; Steve Leeson 1 , Leanne Cooley 2 ; Stephanie Torrey 3 ; Michele Guerin 4 1 Departments 1 Animal & Poultry Science and 4 Population Medicine

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Enriched Cages

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  1. Impact of Stocking Density and Group Size in Enriched Cage Housing on Hen Behavior, Welfare and Performance Tina Widowski1; Linda Caston1; Steve Leeson1, Leanne Cooley2; Stephanie Torrey3; Michele Guerin4 1Departments 1Animal & Poultry Science and 4Population Medicine University of Guelph 2L.H. Gray and Son Limited 3Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) Canada

  2. Enriched Cages • Provide the hygiene and health benefits of conventional cages (Tauson, 2005) • Production comparable to conventional cages • Perches and more space increase bone strength • Furnishings support some of the behavior patterns shown to be important to hens Source: Manitoba Egg Farmers

  3. Enriched Cages • Earliest models held small groups of hens provided nest box, perches, and box of litter for scratching and dustbathing • More recent trend is to increase group size and replace nest box with curtained area and replace litter box with a mat sprinkled with feed Source: LayWel Report Source: Manitoba Egg Farmers

  4. Enriched Cages • Sizes of cages and colonies (Laywel 2007) • Small up to 15 hens • Medium15-30 hens • Large> 30 hens up to ~ 60 or more • Larger cages provide more total space but may increase risk feather pecking, increased competition and higher mortality in larger groups (Wall 2011) • Proposed industry changes in North America include period of incremental increases in space allowance

  5. Enriched Cages • Sizes of cages and colonies • Small up to 15 hens • Medium 15-30 hens • Large> 30 hens up to ~ 60 or more • Larger cages provide more total space but may increase risk feather pecking, increased competition and higher mortality in larger groups (Wall 2011) • Proposed industry changes in Egg Bill include period of incremental increases in space allowance

  6. Group Size and Space • When group size increases the total area and the amount of free space increases • Hens tend to synchronize activities and cluster together X 4 =

  7. Objectives To determine the effects of space allowance and cage size on production, welfare and behavior measures of laying hens housed in two sizes of enriched colony cages

  8. Methods • 1218 Lohman Select Leghorns (LSL)-Lite • Farmer Automatic ‘Enrichable’ Enriched Cage • 2 x 2 factorial experiment • 2 cage sizes: Large= Standard Commercial Model (358x122cm) Small= Custom built (178x122cm) • 2 densities: High= ~520 cm2/hen Low= ~748 cm2/ hen (total floor space allowance)

  9. Methods • Cages were distributed between 2 rooms • 3 tiers, 2 rows of cages in each room • Birds were beak treated at the hatchery and reared in standard rearing cages at the research farm • Housed in laying cages at 18 weeks of age

  10. Methods Two Rooms Each room holds 6 “Large” and 6 “Small”

  11. Large Cage

  12. Small Cage

  13. Nesting Area

  14. Scratch Area

  15. Scratch Area 20 g feed delivered through auger 10 times per day

  16. Group Sizes

  17. Space Allowances in cm2(in2)

  18. Methods Production measures • Hen-day egg production from 20 weeks to end of lay • Egg weights and shell strength (deformation) collected from sample of eggs once per ~28 days • At 37, 43, 49, 56 and 70 weeks of age feed intake was measured over 2 day period

  19. Hen Day Egg Production HighDensity and LowDensity Cages High Density= 80 in2/hen (93.0±.14%) Low Density = 116 in2/ hen (94.4 ±.15%) Age P<0.01 Density NS

  20. Feed Intake (g/bird/day)* *Significantly higher feed intake in the small cages/group sizes

  21. Egg Weights (g) No Effect of Cage Size or Density

  22. Egg Deformation (μm) No Effect of Cage Size, Cage Density, P=.0535

  23. Methods Welfare Measures • Mortality (cumulative) • cause of death determined from necropsy • At 30, 50, and 60 and 70 wks of age 20% birds from each cage were sampled • Body weight • Feather condition • Cleanliness • Keel score • Foot health

  24. Mortality Cumulative % to 72 weeks of age No Effect of Cage Size or Density Significant effects of tier – birds on middle level had highest mortality (P<0.01)

  25. Body Weight No Effect of Cage Size or Density

  26. Head Back Belly Rump Feather Scoring • 0 = Feathers intact • 1 = Some feather damage • 2 = Bare areas Neck

  27. Feather Scoring

  28. Effect of Stocking Density on Feather Scores High Density= 80 in2/hen Low Density = 116 in2/ hen Feather score deteriorated in all birds over time (P<0.001) Feather score poorer in high density cages over time (P<0.001)

  29. Effect of Stocking Density on Cleanliness Score High Density= 80 in2/hen Low Density = 116 in2/ hen 0-3 increasingly dirty Cleanliness score deteriorated in all birds over time (P<0.001) Cleanliness score poorer in high density cages over time (P<0.03)

  30. Methods Behavior • Nesting- enough nest space for all hens? • Foraging – pecking and scratching on mat, feeder, floor • Dust bathing on scratch mat or wire floors • Perching

  31. Nesting • Grad student Michelle Hunniford • Where the eggs were laid • When the eggs were laid • Aggression around nesting

  32. Location • Methods: • During daily egg collection location of all eggs were recorded Nest Area Scratch Area

  33. Pnest= 0.925 Pscratch= 0.912

  34. * *P< 0.01 **P< 0.001 **

  35. Timing • Methods (2 ways) • Digital video recording during 14 hrs of day • During live observations of nesting behaviour (5 -11 am) • Number of eggs recorded every 15 minutes • Analyzed for differences in location over time

  36. Aggressive Behavior • At 69 weeks hens were observed by systematically scanning cages 5 times during 4 observation periods in the morning from lights on to 11 am • Threats • Aggressive pecks

  37. Behavior • Slightly less time spent foraging in High Density • No effects of density on dust bathing • Majority was on wire, not scratch mat • Auger activation stimulated more foraging • Feeder chain activation stimulated dustbathing and foraging

  38. Summary • No density effect on egg production, egg weights, egg shell strength, feed intakes, body weight or uniformity • Higher feed intakes in groups of 28-40 compared to larger cages/group sizes of 55-80 • No effect of size or density on total cumulative mortality • At 60 weeks – more cracked and dirty eggs from scratch area in high density cages

  39. Summary • Feather scores were poorer in high density cages • Birds were slightly dirtier in high density cages • Few effects of density on the behavior that we measured • Cage/group size but not density affected nest use, timing of eggs laid and aggression around nesting

  40. Acknowledgements Funding for this project was provided by • Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs • Egg Farmers of Canada • Poultry Industry Council • Clark Ag-Systems/Farmer Automatic • We are grateful for the assistance of Michelle Edwards for statistical support, Arkell Poultry Research Station staff and the many, many graduates who helped with data collection

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