Abstract
1. An experiment was set up to study the effects of substrate provision on performance and behaviour in the pecking and scratching area (PSA) of non-beak-trimmed hens housed in large furnished cages (60 hens/cage).
2. Three layer hybrids (two brown and one white, ISA-Hendrix Genetics, France) and two substrate conditions (with or without wheat bran automatically distributed on the PSA) were compared in a 3 × 2 experimental design with 12 cages per treatment.
3. Substrate distribution improved laying rate with no impact on the frequency of dirty or cracked eggs.
4. Substrate distribution improved the viability and body integrity of hens, which were not beak-trimmed.
5. Distribution of substrate tended to increase the number of hens in the PSA and enhanced their pecking and scratching behaviours but had a negative impact on the number of dust bath bouts per cage and encouraged dust bathing on the wire floor close to the feeder.
6. The white hens laid more eggs in the nest than the brown birds and used the PSA more for pecking, scratching and dust bathing at the end of the day than the brown hens, underlining the necessity to adapt cage furnishing and rearing management to specific behaviours of each layer genotype.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors are grateful to Mr Galea from ISA-Hendrix Genetics, to the Experimental Services for Poultry and Rabbit Husbandry of Anses and to Ms Bellicot, Ms Taktak, Mrs Homo, Mrs Pol and Mr Leon for their technical assistance.