AI Article Synopsis

  • The EU's ban on standard battery cages since 2012 aims to enhance animal welfare for laying hens, but has led to an increase in bone fractures, especially keel bone fractures, in free-range systems.
  • The causes of these fractures and their welfare impacts are not well understood, raising concerns about housing designs that prioritize hens' natural behaviors without addressing potential injury risks.
  • There are discrepancies in how the directive is applied across the UK, such as differing requirements for aerial perches, which may contribute to bone fractures, prompting a need for better housing designs and genetic selection to mitigate these issues.

Article Abstract

1. The EU laying hen directive, which bans standard battery cages from 2012, has implications for animal welfare, particularly since housing laying hens in extensive systems, while increasing natural behaviour and improving bone strength, is associated with a greater level of bone fractures, predominantly of the keel bone, compared to birds housed in cages. 2. The aetiology and welfare consequences of keel and other bone fractures are not well understood and could have important implications for housing system designs. While proposed alterations to layer housing are based on the desire to fulfil behavioural needs and increase bone strength, there appears to have been little consideration of the effect of system on potential injury. 3. In addition, there are variations in how the directive is interpreted. For example, egg producers housing hens in extensive systems in Scotland and Northern Ireland must provide hens with aerial perches, whereas in England and Wales they do not. Aerial perches may be implicated in bone fracture injuries. 4. This paper reviews the prevalence of bone fractures in the egg-laying sector of the poultry industry and the literature on perches. It also explores how bone fractures may be occurring. 5. We propose some means of reducing bone fracture, namely through improved housing designs and genetic selection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00071660903110844DOI Listing

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