Abstract

Chicks (Gallus gallus domesticus) make a repetitive, high energy ‘distress’ call when stressed. Distress calls are a catch-all response to a range of environmental stressors, and elicit food calling and brooding from hens. Pharmacological and behavioural laboratory studies link expression of this call with negative affective state. As such, there is an a priori expectation that distress calls on farms indicate not only physical, but emotional welfare. Using whole-house recordings on 12 commercial broiler flocks (n = 25 090–26 510/flock), we show that early life (day 1–4 of placement) distress call rate can be simply and linearly estimated using a single acoustic parameter: spectral entropy. After filtering to remove low-frequency machinery noise, spectral entropy per minute of recording had a correlation of −0.88 with a manual distress call count. In videos collected on days 1–3, age-specific behavioural correlates of distress calling were identified: calling was prevalent (spectral entropy low) when foraging/drinking were high on day 1, but when chicks exhibited thermoregulatory behaviours or were behaviourally asynchronous thereafter. Crucially, spectral entropy was predictive of important commercial and welfare-relevant measures: low median daily spectral entropy predicted low weight gain and high mortality, not only into the next day, but towards the end of production. Further research is required to identify what triggers, and thus could alleviate, distress calling in broiler chicks. However, within the field of precision livestock farming, this work shows the potential for simple descriptors of the overall acoustic environment to be a novel, tractable and real-time ‘iceberg indicator’ of current and future welfare.

Highlights

  • An ‘iceberg’ welfare indicator is a single marker that covaries with a range of physical, behavioural and emotional welfare concerns [1]

  • The ‘distress call’ is a repetitive, high energy vocalization made by young chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) when stressed [2], which could be a candidate iceberg indicator

  • Distress calling is so reliably triggered by social isolation that it has been proposed as a screening assay for drug development [7]

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Summary

Introduction

An ‘iceberg’ welfare indicator is a single marker that covaries with a range of physical, behavioural and emotional welfare concerns [1]. Contexts eliciting distress calling are found to elevate physiological stress markers including corticosterone and interleukin-6 [3,4], and negatively impact on cognitive indicators of mood [5,6]. Chicks are dependent on the hen thermally and for foraging, and the function of the call is to attract attention and elicit ‘food calls’ from the hen [8]. As such, this communication with the absent hen may be a sensitive indicator of emerging environmental concerns affecting commercially reared chicks

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