Abstract

A major feature of our living environment consists of the domesticated animals. As their use intensifies so too does the obligation to them — and to their basic life practices — which we acquired at the moment of their domestication. Much of the behaviour of farm animals is concerned with self-maintenance, indeed, highly successful self-maintenance is the basis of animal productivity. Activities involved in such maintenance appear to fall into eight primary categories. These are basically of innate origin and include much instinctive behaviour. The use of these behaviours of reactivity, ingestion, exploration, movement, association, body care, territorialism and rest are vital to the animal in its integration and mediation with its environment. Within these eight primary systems of behaviour, numerous specific behaviours are exhibited in natural free-ranging conditions. Cattle exhibit 44 specific behaviours related to maintenance; sheep have 43 and pigs show 48. All of these above behaviours require environmental facility and where this is deficient, deficits occur in behaviour. Ethological deficits have been determined for methods of husbandry relating to the intensive production of calves, steers, sheep and pigs. Veal calves had 25 behavioural deficits, feedlot cattle had 11, housed sheep had 13 and enstalled swine had 26. These figures give indices of behavioural deprivation ranging from 25% in feedlot cattle to 56% in veal calves in stalls. Anomalous behaviour is now increasingly seen among animals which are managed under close confinement; restricted accommodation in an essentially featureles environment. Much of the anomalous behaviour which has been investigated is found to be the result of aversive environments. Anomalous behaviours are typically found in those forms of husbandry which involve intense grouping of animals and also a lack of what might be termed diversionary facilities in their environment. Reduced input of environmental stimulation and opportunity is evidently capable of acting with adverse effect on functional mediation, so as to generate anomalous forms of behaviour such as “orosthenia” — pathological oral activity. Such abnormal behaviour serves as a symptom of confinement stress. In animal production the application of ethology can provide a monitoring operation for livestock care to ensure welfare and ethological entitlement.

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