Swine Behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

what are 4 key facts about pigs?

A

polytocous
precocial
omnivorous
olfactory is a primary sense

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2
Q

how is a pigs vision?

A

not great
310 degrees
monocular
move towards the light - using natural behaviours in intensive farming

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3
Q

do they have good hearing

A

they can hear higher pitches than humans

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4
Q

what is their vocabulary

A

grunts, squeaks, barks and screams
depends on context

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5
Q

what is a souder

A

a group of wild pigs
made up of related females and offspring (males travel together to find souders)
eat anything and spend 70% of the time foraging

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6
Q

what is the weaning time for wild pigs

A

12-16 weeks

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7
Q

are wild pigs prey or predator

A

predators, they dont have many natural predators
(on farm they are prey)

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8
Q

where are wild boar originally from

A

europe for specialty meat
they got loose, escaped - and now are invasive species

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9
Q

when did pigs get domesticated?

A

10500 years ago

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10
Q

did domestication change their behaviour

A

there has been a change in genetics but they still present natural behaviours

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11
Q

what is the pig park experiement

A

wood-gush, stolba and Newberry
released domestic pigs into a wild ennvironment

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12
Q

what was witness in the pig park experiement

A

rooting, exploring and foraging
separate area for dunging and nesting
play behaviour

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13
Q

what are the biggest mistakes during pig handling

A

over prodding
over crowding

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14
Q

what do farmers need to consider

A

their natural behaviours

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15
Q

what factor influences their susceptibility to heat stress?

A

their small hearts
vasodilation - drop in BP - increase heart rate - heart failure

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16
Q

what is porcine stress syndrome

A

acute stress response - negatively influences meat quality/ economic return
common problem in 1980s genetic marker identified in 1991
testing and selection have eliminated the problem

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17
Q

what is a barren environment

A

the difference between wild and intensive
- wild has exploration, foraging and social relationships
- intensive is considered barren because its on concrete or hard plastic and slatted floors with some form of enrichment
- they dont have natural behaviours and dont get to change behaviours often

18
Q

why do we care if an environment is barren?

A

-causes psychological effects - borden and frustration
- abnormal behaviours (steriotipies)
- damaging behaviours - belly nosing, tail biting and pen-mate manipulation

19
Q

how can we measure stress responses?

A

observing behaviour, vocalizations
social interactions( negative or positive)
postures
activity ( awake, inactive, pen exploration)

20
Q

what is the NOT

A

novel object test - exploration and fear

21
Q

what is OFT

A

open field test - exploration and fear

22
Q

what is RIT

A

resident - intruder test - agression

23
Q

when did intensive agriculture take off

A

the industrial revolution
less labour from WWII but still needed to increase production
it was not designed with animal welfare involved

24
Q

why are farrowing crates important?

A

reduce crushing and simplify health checks and feeding

24
Q

what changed to make animal welfare more important?

A

behavioural and physical needs of an animal influences production

25
Q

what are the 7 major welfare issues

A
  1. farrowing creates
  2. castration
  3. tail docking
  4. stall housing
    5 barren environment
  5. mixing
  6. transport
26
Q

why are farrowing crates issues for sows

A

frustration
loonger birthing intervals
greater chance of stillborns

26
Q

what wild behaviours are restricted through farrowing crates

A

sows leave groups to farrow
nest building

27
Q

why is the problem surrounding pain management for tail docking

A

pain management doesn’t have time to work

28
Q

why castrate

A

boar taint and aggression
alternatives? - testing

29
Q

why tail dock

A

reduce chance of tail biting
alternatives - removing agressive pigs
replace behaviour by changin the environment

30
Q

when do intensive pigs wean?

A

21-28 days

31
Q

What is an issue with early weening?

A

abrupt - all piglets removed from pens, moved to a new room
moved in groups of up to 100
early mixing with unfarmiliar piglets

32
Q

what is the problem with stall housing

A

restricted freedom of movement - freedom to perform normal behaviours
bordem and frustration - development of abnormal behaviours

33
Q

who has new codes

A

gestation sows
breeding sows
farrowing sows
teaser boars

34
Q
A
35
Q

why do pigs fight when they are mixed? how do they maintain this?

A

dominance hierarchies
- with avoidance behaviours and extreme agression

36
Q

Is mixing aggression a natural behaviour?

A

no, souders do not normally interact, mixing aggression relatively uncommon

37
Q

when do mixing events occur in intensive systems?

A

weaning
to grow-finish pens
sorting based on weight
shipping to abattoir
lairage

38
Q

what are temperature challenges unique to canada?

A
  • long distances
  • wide ranges in temperature
  • extreme colds - hyperthermia and frost bite or heat stroke
39
Q

what causes stress in transport

A

ramps
electric prods
unfarmiliar hallways and walkways
temperature / humidity
unfarmiliar smells and sounds
new stock people

40
Q

what are some current research areas in ethology in swine

A

effects of periodic enricment on different life stages
play can indicate physiological and psychological robustness in pigs
animal base post mortem indicators
creating and validating a one step electrocution euthanasia