Age-related changes in fear, sociality and pecking behaviours in two strains of laying hen
- 1 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in British Poultry Science
- Vol. 42 (4), 414-423
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00071660120070686
Abstract
1. Two lines of commercial hybrid layers (Tetra and ISA Brown) were reared from hatch to 30 weeks of age in groups of 8. The objectives of the experiment were to evaluate the significance of the different selection practices involved in the development of the lines and to assess the potential association between selected behavioural states and the potential for feather damage and cannibalism. 2. Behavioural tests related to fear (tonic immobility,novel object, open field), sociality(runway,proximity in the home pen) and pecking (feather bunch and focal observations of inter-bird and environmental pecking) were conducted at 0 to 2, 5 to 7, 12 to 14, 19 to 21 and 29 to 31 weeks of age. Scan sampling of general behaviour was also conducted at these ages. 3. Underlying sociality was greater in Tetras than in ISA Brown hens. 4. There were no apparent overall strain differences in fearfulness although ISA Brown hens showed significantly longer tonic immobility fear reactions than Tetras at 31 weeks of age. 5. ISA Brown hens gave and received more gentle pecks than Tetra hens whereas preening was commoner among Tetras. There were no strain differences in the number of pecks at litter or food. 6. As birds aged they showed less avoidance of novel objects and Tetras, though not ISA Browns, showed progressively shorter tonic immobility responses. Birds of both strains spent less time resting, more foraging (pecking and scratching) and pecked more at the feather bunch at older ages. 7. Measures taken in the TI, open field, runway (social affiliation) and feather bunch tests were stable over time whereas focal observations of pecking at hens and the environment were not. 8. Factor Analysis showed that 3 factors defined by the novel object test, environmental pecking and pecking at a feather bunch explained most ofthe variation in the correlation matrix between summary measures for the 8 behavioural traits.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fear and Fearfulness in AnimalsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1995
- Sex differences in the response to social stimuli in young chicksEthology Ecology & Evolution, 1989
- Feather-pecking in poultry: Its relation with ground-peckingApplied Animal Behaviour Science, 1986
- The tonic immobility reaction of the domestic fowl: a reviewWorld's Poultry Science Journal, 1986
- Telencephalic removal and tonic immobility in the domestic hen ()Behavioural Processes, 1985
- Some observations on the development of feather-pecking in poultryApplied Animal Behaviour Science, 1984
- Genetic variation in feather‐pecking behaviourBritish Poultry Science, 1980
- Changes in Relative Aggressiveness and Social Dominance Associated with Selection for Early Egg Production in Chickens ,Poultry Science, 1975
- The influence of strain and environmental factors upon feather pecking and cannibalism in fowlsBritish Poultry Science, 1972
- The experimenter as an independent variable in studies of animal hypnosis in chickens (Gallus gallus)Animal Behaviour, 1972