Abstract

Recent publications have shown that citizens in developing nations are gaining interest in farm animal welfare. The aims of this study were to assess the opinion of Chilean citizens about surgical castration without anaesthesia and lack of access to pasture in beef cattle production, to investigate how involvement in livestock production influences opinions, and to evaluate if different types of information would affect their opinion towards these management practices. The study was carried out in the Metropolitan Region of Santiago, Chile, and consisted of two surveys with 400 participants in each study. The first one used an online, self-administered questionnaire and the second one used a face to face questionnaire. The second questionnaire had four information treatments assigned randomly to survey participants (no information; negative information; negative and positive information; positive information). Most participants were aware that the two management practices are common in beef production systems and were opposed to them. Involvement in animal production was associated with greater acceptance of both management practices and participants that had visited a beef production farm before the study were more likely to support castration without anaesthesia in Survey 1. Belonging to any socioeconomic group and providing negative or positive information had no impact on participants’ opinion. The results show a disconnection between the views of participants recruited for this study and beef production systems that do not provide pain control for male cattle surgical castration or provide little or no access to pasture.

Highlights

  • In the last decades, the growth of the livestock sector has been accompanied by intensification of agriculture, and the fast adoption of technologies and of confinement and caged housing [1]

  • The main aim of this study was to assess the opinion of Chilean citizens about two contentious management practices of beef cattle production systems, surgical castration without anaesthesia and cattle’s lack of access to pasture for livestock in confined systems

  • The majority of participants answered that they were aware that surgical castration without anaesthesia (79.0%) and lack of access to pasture for livestock in confined systems (83.0%) are common management practices in beef production systems in Chile

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Summary

Introduction

The growth of the livestock sector has been accompanied by intensification of agriculture, and the fast adoption of technologies and of confinement and caged housing [1]. Public rejection of some aspects of intensive animal production systems has led to the development of regulation and industry actions associated with animal care at the farm

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