Cognitive bias in slow-growing broiler chickens raised in low- or high-complexity environments: using a social-pair testing approach

M. I. Lourenço-Silva, A. Ulans,Andrew Campbell,I. C. L. Almeida Paz,Leonie Jacobs

Research Square (Research Square)(2023)

引用 2|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Abstract Impacts of environmental complexity on affective states in slow-growing broiler chickens are unknown. Chickens' performance in judgment bias tests (JBT) can be limited as they are tested individually, causing fear and anxiety. The objectives were to apply a social-pair JBT to assess the effect of environmental complexity on slow-growing broiler chickens` affective states, and assess the impact of personality and chronic stress on JBT performance. Six-hundred Hubbard Redbro broilers were housed in six low-complexity (similar to commercial) or six high-complexity (permanent and temporary enrichments) pens. Chicken pairs were trained (1 pair/pen) using a multimodal approach, with reward and neutral cues of opposing color and location. Three ambiguous cues were tested: near-positive, middle, and near-neutral cues. Approach and pecking behavior were recorded. Eighty-three percent of chickens (20/24) were successfully trained in 13 days. Personality and chronic stress did not impact chickens’ performance. Chickens successfully discriminated between cues. Low-complexity chickens approached the middle cue faster than high-complexity chickens, indicating that they were in a more positive affective state. The environmental complexity provided in this study did not improve affective states in slow-growing broiler chickens compared to a control. A social-pair JBT resulted in excellent learning and testing outcomes in slow-growing broilers.
更多
查看译文
关键词
broiler chickens,cognitive bias,testing,slow-growing,high-complexity,social-pair
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要