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Behaviour, Welfare, Husbandry & Environment

Perch width preferences of laying hens

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Pages 418-423 | Accepted 27 Jan 2009, Published online: 04 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

1. In order to investigate the effect of perch width on perching behaviour of laying hens, two experiments in which hens could choose between 7 different perch widths (1·5, 3·0, 4·5, 6·0, 7·5, 9·0 and 10·5 cm) were conducted. In one experiment (EXP-2P) test cages contained two long perches gradually broadening and narrowing stepwise, in the other experiment (EXP-7P) 7 separate short perches differing in width were placed in the test cages. In each experiment 12 groups of 4 hens were filmed during day and night. The behaviour and location of the hens were recorded and whether the nest box affected hen distribution over the perches was investigated.

2. During daytime, in EXP-2P, there was an increase in perch use with increasing perch width. Hens spent less time on perches of 1·5 cm wide compared to perches of 9·0 and 10·5 cm wide. In EXP-7P, the 1·5-cm wide perch was also used the least (but only the difference with 4·5-cm wide perches was statistically significant) but perch use did not increase linearly with perch width. During the night, there were no significant perch width preferences in either experiment.

3. The percentage of active behaviours (preening, walking, drinking, pecking at hen) versus passive behaviours (standing, sitting, sleeping) did not differ significantly according to perch width.

4. In EXP-7P, there was a trend for perch use to decrease with greater distances to the nest box in the morning.

5. A perch width of 1·5 cm is not recommended for laying hens. For wider perch widths, results were equivocal: they tend to support rather than challenge the widespread use of 4·5-cm wide perches in commercial units.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the Federal Ministry of Public Health, Safety of the Food Chain and the Environment (project number S-6114). The authors are grateful to the staff of the Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries research for taking care of the laying hens and for their technical assistance.

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