Encouraging store lambs to eat barley straw at housing: Influence upon intake of pen to pen visibility and number of lambs per pen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2017
Extract
Many trials at Reading have shown store lambs to be reluctant to eat straw when first housed after grazing. This is especially so if penned individually, as is often the case in feeding trials. Such isolation may induce stress, including depressed intake (Crampton, 1959; Kidwell, Bohman and Hunter, 1954). Farm animals are generally stimulated to eat more when in a group than when isolated (Curtis, 1983), yet most intake studies, particularly with sheep and cattle, are conducted with individually-penned animals. Concern for the welfare of animals being used for trials calls for systems of housing that minimise stress.
The present experiment tested the hypothesis that straw intake, by store lambs first-housed after grazing, would increase if lambs were penned in pairs rather than individually, or confined in pens allowing pen to pen vision rather than prohibiting pen to pen vision.
- Type
- Silage and Feeding Behaviour
- Information
- Proceedings of the British Society of Animal Production (1972) , Volume 1993: Winter meeting , March 1993 , pp. 144
- Copyright
- Copyright © The British Society of Animal Production 1993
References
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