AI Article Synopsis

  • Injurious pecking (IP) is a major welfare issue for laying hens, particularly in cage-free environments, highlighting the need for solutions that consider the underlying causes of this behavior.
  • The review examines how prenatal and early postnatal factors, such as maternal stress and incubation conditions, influence the development of IP and behavioral programming in hens.
  • Improving environmental conditions for hens during critical early life stages may help prevent IP, suggesting that better egg handling, incubation, and chick-rearing practices are vital for commercial laying hen welfare.

Article Abstract

Injurious pecking (IP) represents a serious concern for the welfare of laying hens (). The risk of IP among hens with intact beaks in cage-free housing prompts a need for solutions based on an understanding of underlying mechanisms. In this review, we explore how behavioural programming prenatal and early postnatal environmental conditions could influence the development of IP in laying hens. The possible roles of early life adversity and mismatch between early life programming and subsequent environmental conditions are considered. We review the role of maternal stress, egg conditions, incubation settings (temperature, light, sound, odour) and chick brooding conditions on behavioural programming that could be linked to IP. Brain and behavioural development can be programmed by prenatal and postnatal environmental conditions, which if suboptimal could lead to a tendency to develop IP later in life, as we illustrate with a Jenga tower that could fall over if not built solidly. If so, steps taken to optimise the environmental conditions of previous generations and incubation conditions, reduce stress around hatching, and guide the early learning of chicks will aid in prevention of IP in commercial laying hen flocks.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8323009PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.678500DOI Listing

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