Review: Early life piglet experiences and impacts on immediate and longer-term adaptability

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
M.E. Lucas, L.M. Hemsworth, P.H. Hemsworth
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Pigs in production systems are routinely exposed to challenging situations including abrupt weaning, painful husbandry procedures, intense contact with stockpeople, and exposure to novel social and physical environments. The resilience of pigs to these stressors has implications for animal welfare and productivity and can be affected by early life experiences. In rodents and primates, early experiences with stressors that the animal can adequately cope with confers future stress adaptability, leading to less abnormal behaviour, lower behavioural and physiological responses to stressors, and faster recovery after stress exposure. Early experiences that can affect the ability of pigs to overcome challenge include interactions with the dam, conspecifics, humans, and the overall complexity of the environment. Farrowing crates limit the sow’s ability to show maternal behaviour towards piglets, and negatively affect piglet social behaviour during lactation, with less play and more manipulation of pen mates in crates than in large pens. Rearing in pens has been proposed to improve the ability of pigs to cope with routine stressors, but the evidence for this is conflicting. The early housing environment can affect general fearfulness and fear of humans, and surprisingly, most studies have shown fear responses to be greater in pigs reared pens than in crates. Given the potential for fear to affect animal welfare and productivity, more detailed research on early housing effects is needed. While there is limited evidence that early housing influences fear in the longer term, human contact early in life appears to have a more profound and sustained effect, with regular positive human interaction early in life having an enduring effect on reducing pigs’ fear of humans. The practicality of positive human-pig interaction in a commercial environment needs to be examined further, but only a small amount of positive human contact early in life can improve the resilience of pigs to routine husbandry stressors. Early social experience with non-littermates reduces stress at weaning and mixing, while early weaning before 3–4 weeks of age increases abnormal behaviours. Environmental enrichment, such as foraging substrates and increased floor space, reduces abnormal behaviour in piglets, but housing in an enriched environment early in life and subsequently in a non-enriched environment can increase abnormal behaviour if these environments are dramatically different. Although the later environment can modify the influence of the early environment, overall, early life experiences can be important in shaping how pigs cope with stress in both an immediate and longer-term capacity.

回顾:仔猪的早期生活经历及其对近期和长期适应能力的影响。
生产系统中的猪经常会面临各种挑战,包括突然断奶、痛苦的饲养程序、与饲养员的密集接触以及接触新的社会和物理环境。猪对这些压力的适应能力对动物福利和生产率都有影响,而且会受到早期生活经历的影响。在啮齿类动物和灵长类动物中,动物能够充分应对压力的早期经历会赋予其未来的压力适应能力,从而减少异常行为,降低对压力的行为和生理反应,并在压力暴露后更快地恢复。会影响猪克服挑战能力的早期经历包括与母猪、同类、人类的互动以及环境的整体复杂性。产仔箱限制了母猪对仔猪表现出母性行为的能力,并对哺乳期仔猪的社会行为产生负面影响。围栏饲养被认为能提高猪应对日常应激的能力,但这方面的证据并不一致。早期的饲养环境会影响猪对人类的普遍恐惧感和恐惧心理,令人惊讶的是,大多数研究都表明,围栏饲养的猪比板条箱饲养的猪恐惧感更强。鉴于恐惧可能会影响动物福利和生产率,因此需要对早期饲养环境的影响进行更详细的研究。虽然早期饲养对恐惧的长期影响证据有限,但生命早期与人的接触似乎具有更深远、更持久的影响,生命早期定期与人进行积极的互动对减少猪对人的恐惧具有持久的作用。在商业环境中,人与猪之间积极互动的实用性还有待进一步研究,但只有在生命早期进行少量积极的人际接触,才能提高猪对日常饲养压力的适应能力。早期与非同窝猪的社会经验可减少断奶和混群时的应激,而 3-4 周龄前的早期断奶则会增加异常行为。环境富集(如觅食基质和更大的地面空间)可减少仔猪的异常行为,但如果早期饲养环境与非富集环境差异很大,则早期饲养环境与非富集环境会增加异常行为。虽然后来的环境会改变早期环境的影响,但总体而言,早期生活经历对猪只如何应对应激具有重要的直接和长期影响。
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来源期刊
Animal
Animal 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.80%
发文量
246
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Editorial board animal attracts the best research in animal biology and animal systems from across the spectrum of the agricultural, biomedical, and environmental sciences. It is the central element in an exciting collaboration between the British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) and represents a merging of three scientific journals: Animal Science; Animal Research; Reproduction, Nutrition, Development. animal publishes original cutting-edge research, ''hot'' topics and horizon-scanning reviews on animal-related aspects of the life sciences at the molecular, cellular, organ, whole animal and production system levels. The main subject areas include: breeding and genetics; nutrition; physiology and functional biology of systems; behaviour, health and welfare; farming systems, environmental impact and climate change; product quality, human health and well-being. Animal models and papers dealing with the integration of research between these topics and their impact on the environment and people are particularly welcome.
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