Abstract

BackgroundThere is a critical need to develop appropriate on-farm euthanasia methods for poultry species. Euthanasia methods should affect the brain first causing insensibility, followed by cardiorespiratory arrest. Neck or cervical dislocation methods, either manual (CD) or mechanical (MCD), are reported to cause a prolonged time to loss of sensibility and death with inconsistent results upon application, especially MCD methods. However, there is limited information on cervical dislocation in turkeys. The overall objective of this study was to assess the welfare implications of CD and a newly developed MCD device for euthanasia of cull turkeys in comparison with intravenous (IV) pentobarbital sodium (1 mL/4.5 kg), the gold standard euthanasia method. Time to death using electroencephalographic (EEG) and behavioural responses were monitored in eight and eighteen week-old turkeys for five minutes after each euthanasia method application. Spectral analyses of EEG responses and onset of isoelectric EEGs were compared to baseline EEG recordings of birds under anesthesia and behavioural responses were studied among euthanasia treatments. A significant decrease in brain activity frequencies analysis and isoelectric EEG were recorded as time of brain death.ResultsAll turkeys euthanized with IV pentobarbital sodium presented a rapid and irreversible decrease in the EEG activity at approximately 30s post-injection with minimal behavioural responses. CD and MCD methods caused EEG responses consistent with brain death at approximately 120 s and 300 s, respectively. Additionally, isoelectric EEGs resulted in all pentobarbital sodium and CD groups, but only in 54 and 88% of the eight and eighteen week-old turkeys in the MCD groups, respectively. There were few clear patterns of behavioural responses after CD and MCD application. However, cessation of body movement and time to isoelectric EEG after CD application were positively correlated.ConclusionsUse of CD and MCD resulted in a prolonged time to death in both age groups of turkeys. MCD application presents a number of welfare risks based on electroencephalographic and behavioural findings. Intravenous pentobarbital sodium induced rapid brain death, but possesses several on-farm limitations. To develop improvements in cervical dislocation methods, further investigations into combined or alternative methods are required to reduce the prolonged time to insensibility and death.

Highlights

  • There is a critical need to develop appropriate on-farm euthanasia methods for poultry species

  • The frequencies of tonic and/or clonic convulsions, gasping, loss of nictitating membrane reflex, loss of pupillary light reflex, and cardiac arrest were affected by the euthanasia method when comparing cervical dislocation (CD) to pentobarbital sodium and mechanical cervical dislocation (MCD) to pentobarbital sodium in 8 week-old (w.o.) turkeys

  • More turkeys were observed with tonic and clonic convulsions in 8 w.o. birds euthanized with CD and MCD vs. pentobarbital sodium

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Summary

Introduction

There is a critical need to develop appropriate on-farm euthanasia methods for poultry species. Neck or cervical dislocation methods, either manual (CD) or mechanical (MCD), are reported to cause a prolonged time to loss of sensibility and death with inconsistent results upon application, especially MCD methods. Cervical dislocation is a commonly used on-farm euthanasia method in commercial poultry due to its practicality, low cost, ease to use and is only limited by the weight of the animal in most euthanasia guidelines [3, 4] It can be applied either manually or mechanically with a suitable device that may differ in size, design and application technique, but it should not cause crushing of the cervical vertebrae [2]. There are welfare concerns regarding the efficacy of MCD to induce death without pain, prolonged time to loss of sensibility and death following application, and esthetics of technique

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