Abstract

Severe feather pecking (SFP) in commercial laying hens is a maladaptive behavior which is associated with anxiety traits. Many experimental studies have shown that stress in the parents can affect anxiety in the offspring, but until now these effects have been neglected in addressing the problem of SFP in commercially kept laying hens. We therefore studied whether parental stock (PS) affected the development of SFP and anxiety in their offspring. We used flocks from a brown and white genetic hybrid because genetic background can affect SFP and anxiety. As SFP can also be influenced by housing conditions on the rearing farm, we included effects of housing system and litter availability in the analysis. Forty-seven rearing flocks, originating from ten PS flocks were followed. Behavioral and physiological parameters related to anxiety and SFP were studied in the PS at 40 weeks of age and in the rearing flocks at one, five, ten and fifteen weeks of age. We found that PS had an effect on SFP at one week of age and on anxiety at one and five weeks of age. In the white hybrid, but not in the brown hybrid, high levels of maternal corticosterone, maternal feather damage and maternal whole-blood serotonin levels showed positive relations with offsprings’ SFP at one week and offsprings’ anxiety at one and five weeks of age. Disruption and limitation of litter supply at an early age on the rearing farms increased SFP, feather damage and fearfulness. These effects were most prominent in the brown hybrid. It appeared that hens from a brown hybrid are more affected by environmental conditions, while hens from a white hybrid were more strongly affected by parental effects. These results are important for designing measures to prevent the development of SFP, which may require a different approach in brown and white flocks.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn avian and fish species, mothers can affect the behavioral development of their offspring both before and after birth or hatch (e.g. humans [1,2], rodents [3,4], fish [5], wild birds [6] and domesticated birds [7]; for reviews see: [8,9,10], farm animals [11], birds [12,13])

  • In mammals, and in avian and fish species, mothers can affect the behavioral development of their offspring both before and after birth or hatch

  • Additional analysis revealed that for the Dekalb White (DW) hybrid, but not for the ISA hybrid, offspring’ severe feather pecking (FP) (SFP) at one week of age was related to high maternal plasma-CORT (CORT*hybrid: F1,39 = 6.25, P = 0.02), high maternal whole-blood 5-HT (5HT*hybrid: F1,39 = 7.72, P = 0.01) and high maternal feather damage score (FS*hybrid: F1,39 = 5.02, P = 0.03), see Figure 2 [top panel]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In avian and fish species, mothers can affect the behavioral development of their offspring both before and after birth or hatch (e.g. humans [1,2], rodents [3,4], fish [5], wild birds [6] and domesticated birds [7]; for reviews see: [8,9,10], farm animals [11], birds [12,13]). Stress experienced by the hen can reduce her own body weight [7] and egg weight [23,24], and in this way influence offspring development too. Such maternal effects may underlie the repeated finding that offspring of stressed birds have higher anxiety levels compared with offspring from non-stressed birds [7,21,25,26,27]

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call