Abstract

The assessment of foot pad dermatitis at slaughter is a suitable method to assess and monitor the welfare of broilers. The goals of this study were to define and validate a camera-based score that could identify macroscopic lesions of the foot pads, to identify errors, and to assess possible external factors that could influence the assessment. In the first phase 200 feet of broilers and in the second phase 500 feet were collected at slaughter, assessed visually, hung back into the evisceration line, and assessed by an automatic system. The camera score cut-off values were defined in the first (=calibration) phase. In the second (=validation) phase, the performance of diagnosis for these cut-off values was evaluated, and possible errors in the assessment of reference surface area and foot pad lesions were analyzed. The results showed that, in particular, Macro Scores 0, 2, and 3 could be identified with sufficiently high sensitivity. For Macro Score 1, the sensitivity of diagnosis was not sufficiently high in the two evaluated software versions. The current automatic assessment systems at slaughter could be adjusted to the cut-off values in order to classify foot pad dermatitis lesions. Furthermore, software updates can enhance the performance measures and lower the probability of errors.

Highlights

  • The assessment of animal-based indicators, such as foot pad dermatitis (FPD), is considered a suitable method to assess and monitor the welfare of broilers at farm level [1]

  • Threshold values of a camera score to identify different categories of macroscopic scores were defined in a first step

  • The performance measures of diagnosis of these macro scores were analyzed in a validation phase

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Summary

Introduction

The assessment of animal-based indicators, such as foot pad dermatitis (FPD), is considered a suitable method to assess and monitor the welfare of broilers at farm level [1]. FPD causes inflammatory and often necrotic lesions of the foot and toe pads in broilers [2]. FPD is a welfare problem, but can cause economic losses due to carcass condemnation and low growth rate [2,4]. The identified risk factors for the onset of FPD are nutritional aspects [4], seasonal effects, the age at slaughter, low daily weight gain [5], and the type of litter [6,7]. De Jong et al [9] observed that wet litter had a negative influence on FPD, and on overall health and welfare parameters, such as gait score, hock burn, cleanliness, growth, feed intake, performance, and carcass condemnation or rejection

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