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Master Animal Ethics and Welfare – Notes, Case Studies and Practical Insights – with Rahul

Welfare of Laying Hens

  • Laying hens are one of the most intensively farmed animals worldwide.
  • Their welfare depends on housing systems, management practices, nutrition, and health.
  • Public concern has grown over confinement systems such as battery cages.

 

Major Welfare Concerns in Laying Hens

  • Confinement stress in conventional cages: restricted movement, inability to express natural behaviors.
  • Bone weakness and osteoporosis due to lack of exercise and high calcium demand for egg production.
  • Feather pecking and cannibalism in group housing systems due to stress, high density, or boredom.
  • Beak trimming as a management tool, which causes pain and affects normal pecking behavior.
  • Foot health issues like bumblefoot and hyperkeratosis in wire-based cages.
  • Light manipulation (artificial lighting programs) may cause stress or affect circadian rhythm.
  • Overproduction stress leading to metabolic disorders such as fatty liver hemorrhagic syndrome.

 

 

Common Housing Systems and Welfare Implications

a. Battery Cages (Conventional Cages):

  • Provide minimal space (300–550 cm² per bird).
  • Birds cannot perch, dust-bathe, nest, or forage.
  • Welfare is very poor due to severe behavioral restriction.

 

b. Enriched/Furnished Cages:

  • Larger cages with perches, nesting areas, and scratching pads.
  • Allow limited natural behaviors.
  • Improved welfare compared to battery cages, but still restricted compared to non-cage systems.

 

c. Barn or Aviary Systems (Non-cage, indoor):

  • Birds can move freely, perch, dust-bathe, and forage indoors.
  • Welfare is higher, but risks of feather pecking, cannibalism, and parasite load increase.

 

d. Free-range Systems:

  • Birds have access to outdoor areas.
  • Allow maximum behavioral expression.
  • Concerns include predator risk, disease exposure, and variable climate stress.

 

Behavioral Needs of Laying Hens

  • Nesting behavior before egg-laying.
  • Perching and roosting, especially at night.
  • Dust bathing to maintain feather condition.
  • Foraging and pecking as natural exploratory behaviors.
  • Space to flap wings and stretch.

Failure to meet these needs leads to stress, frustration, and abnormal behaviors

 

Indicators of Poor Welfare in Laying Hens

  • High feather loss or damage (from feather pecking or stress).
  • Poor bone strength and frequent fractures.
  • Increased mortality due to cannibalism or disease.
  • Abnormal behaviors: pacing, stereotypies, excessive vocalization.
  • Decreased egg production or poor egg quality.

 

Strategies to Improve Welfare in Laying Hens

  • Transition from battery cages to enriched or cage-free systems.
  • Providing perches, nest boxes, and dust-bathing areas to allow natural behaviors.
  • Managing group sizes and stocking densities to reduce aggression.
  • Use of genetic selection for calm, less aggressive strains.
  • Better lighting programs to mimic natural day–night cycles.
  • Enrichment: pecking blocks, straw, or foraging materials to prevent boredom.
  • Beak trimming alternatives such as environmental enrichment and strain selection.

 

Key Welfare Legislation and Guidelines

  • EU (1999/74/EC): banned conventional battery cages from 2012; only enriched cages and alternative systems allowed.
  • OIE and FAWC guidelines: emphasize the Five Freedoms and welfare-based design of housing.
  • Increasing global shift toward cage-free egg production due to consumer demand.
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