Abstract
Most modern production systems, especially in temperate climates, do not offer wallowing facilities to pigs and, to date, this has neither
generated much concern in welfare science nor public debate on pig welfare. Nevertheless, wallowing is a natural behaviour of pigs
which may be important to them. This paper systematically examines the overall importance of wallowing for pig welfare using principles
developed in semantic modelling. As a first step, relevant citations were collected from the scientific literature. Secondly, since the
importance of the attribute (‘wallowing’) is dependent upon the discrepancy between its best and worst levels, these levels were specified
in relation to the status quo in pig husbandry, ie no pool (even during periods of overheating) and the ideal mud pool, respectively.
Criteria for an ideal mud pool were formulated in terms of pool location and size, substrate, thermal conditions, body care and hygiene.
Thirdly, available scientific information about wallowing was systematically described in relation to ten so-called weighting categories
identified in semantic modelling (pain and illness, survival/heat stress, fitness, stress, aggression, abnormal behaviour, frustration, natural
behaviour, preferences and demand). Fourthly, the welfare importance of wallowing was assessed by tentatively comparing it to several
other welfare attributes, such as food, foraging substrate, social contact and non-castration. This leads to the suggestion that wallowing
is important for pig welfare because of its multifaceted nature. It may even be very important when other forms of thermoregulation
are sub-optimal. This paper, finally, discusses the ‘ethical room for manoeuvre’ concerning the (non-) implementation of mud pools in
practice. An integrated approach is suggested to address related scientific, technological and ethical issues, because stakeholders are
faced not only with scientific and technological gaps in knowledge but also with economical, ecological, food-safety and psychological
barriers. As an important element of natural behaviour and positive welfare, the subject may provide an opportunit
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 347-363 |
Journal | Animal Welfare |
Volume | 20 |
Issue number | 3 |
Publication status | Published - 2011 |
Keywords
- decision-support-system
- consumer demand theory
- growing pigs
- pregnant sows
- sus-scrofa
- summer environment
- swine performance
- unshaded wallows
- semantic model
- behavior