Abstract
Broiler breeders (parents of meat chickens) are selected for fast growth and become obese if fed ad libitum. To avoid this
and maintain good health and reproductive ability, they are feed restricted to about 1/3 of what they would eat ad libitum.
As a result, they experience chronic hunger and exhibit abnormal behaviour patterns that may indicate stress and
frustration. One approach to measuring hunger is to observe how much birds will work, such as pecking a key, for access to
more or different types of food. However, the sight, smell, and feedback from consumption of the feed reward changes the
context and may artificially raise feeding motivation. To avoid this, we tested broiler breeders in an apparatus in which they
could work for access to a wooden platform covered in wood shavings by crossing a water runway which increased in
length and depth in 8 successive tests. In the wood shavings area, they could perform exploratory and foraging behaviour
(the appetitive phase of feeding) but were never rewarded with feed. Sixty birds were divided into three feed quantity
treatments: commercial restriction (R), and twice (2R) or three times (3R) this amount. Overall, birds fed R worked harder to
reach the wood shavings area (reached it in a larger number of tests) than 2R and 3R birds (P,0.001). More restricted birds
took less time to reach the area (P,0.001, R,2R,3R) and spent more time foraging while there (P,0.001, R.2R.3R). This
indicates that restricted-fed birds were hungry and willing to work for the opportunity to forage even though food was
never provided, suggesting that their motivation to perform the appetitive component of feeding behaviour (foraging/food
searching) was sufficient to sustain their response. Thus food restriction in broiler breeders is a welfare concern. However
these methods could be used to test alternative feeding regimes to attempt to find ways of alleviating hunger while still
maintaining healthy growth and reproduction in these birds.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | PLoS ONE |
| Volume | 9 |
| Issue number | 7 e102322 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | First published - 2014 |
Bibliographical note
52110113Keywords
- Appetitive behaviour
- Broiler breeder
- Feeding motivation
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