Abstract
Simple SummaryDisbudding of dairy goat kids is a routine, necessary, but painful husbandry procedure. Heat cautery disbudding is the industry standard since it is effective and can be rapidly performed by lay personnel on large numbers of kids. Efforts to improve welfare associated with heat cautery disbudding commonly focus on adjunct anesthesia and analgesia but there are often technical, legal, and safety barriers to routine use of these adjunct therapies in production settings. This project explores four alternative methods to heat cautery disbudding for safety, efficacy, and vocal evidence of duress during the procedure. We found that heat cautery was the most effective, was similar to the sham procedure for vocalization count during the procedure, and did not cause any serious or lasting complications. Clove oil injection, short-term topical application of caustic paste, and two cryosurgical methods were not consistently effective; additionally, the latter two created significantly more vocalization efforts. Clove oil injection was associated with several unexpected and severe complications including unintended tissue necrosis, temporary paresis, skull defects, meningitis, and death. Collectively, we did not find that any of the alternative methods of disbudding provided a feasible option over heat cautery to improve welfare associated with the disbudding process.There is a strong industry demand for technically simple and highly efficacious alternatives to heat cautery disbudding in goat kids that can be performed as a stand-alone procedure without adjunct anesthesia, and that result in improved overall welfare through reduced acute pain, reduced tissues healing interval, and a consistent safety record. The objective of this study was to consider the net effect of disbudding techniques on goat welfare by examining vocalization frequency, long-term efficacy and animal safety associated with four alternative caprine disbudding methods against sham-disbudded and heat-cautery controls. Sixty-five commercial male dairy kids were disbudded at 3–10 days of age with one of six disbudding treatments (clove oil injection, caustic paste, two cryosurgical methods, heat-cautery, and sham procedure). Heat cautery was 91% effective, caustic paste was 55% effective, and the other treatments were ineffective. Heat cautery and sham procedures resulted in similar vocalization efforts; freezing with a liquid-nitrogen cooled iron resulted in significantly greater vocalization numbers. No unintended paste transfer injuries were observed with short-term application of the caustic paste. Heat cautery resulted in numerous superficial infections but no permanent injury. Clove oil injection was associated with several unexpected and severe complications including unintended tissue necrosis, temporary paresis, skull defects, meningitis, and death. Collectively, we did not find that any of the alternative methods of disbudding provided a feasible option over heat cautery to improve welfare.
Highlights
Caprine disbudding is commonly performed for safety considerations or as a requirement by show organizations
This study comprises one part of a larger project aimed at identifying potential techniques for disbudding kids on commercial dairy goat farms in the absence of anesthesia and analgesia
This study comprises one part of a larger project aimed at identifying potential techniques for disbudding kids on commercial dairy goat farms in the absence of anesthesia and analgesia; here we focused on efficacy and complications of disbudding techniques
Summary
Caprine disbudding is commonly performed for safety considerations or as a requirement by show organizations. Because the intersex condition is associated with breeding for selection of polled goats, the majority of dairy goats are born horned and are disbudded by producers during the first one to two weeks of life, most often without adjunct anesthesia or pain relief due to technical, safety, and legal barriers in the United States. Adjunct anesthesia and analgesia can reduce acute pain associated with hot iron disbudding [9,10,11], chronic pain is more challenging to address in production settings and it is important to look beyond acute pain when assessing welfare. Procedural complications and other animal safety considerations may increase or prolong pain, or create additional suffering through illness or death. Poor efficacy may result in secondary dehorning procedures, ongoing scur management challenges, or exacerbate social conflict within the herd
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