4.7 Article

Increasing Environmental Complexity by Providing Different Types of Litter and Perches during Early Rearing Boosts Coping Abilities in Domestic Fowl Chicks

期刊

ANIMALS
卷 12, 期 15, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani12151969

关键词

adaptability; immunology; stress; laying hens; animal welfare; resilience; development; learning

资金

  1. Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2016-01761]
  2. Swedish Research Council [2016-01761] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council
  3. Formas [2016-01761] Funding Source: Formas

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This small-scale experimental study found that giving chicks the possibility to express choices between different variants of the same resource could improve their ability to cope with challenges and make the most of new opportunities. Chicks with access to different types of litter and perches were found to be less fearful, less chronically stressed, and better prepared to cope with pathogenic challenges. Additionally, they exhibited improved learning ability. These findings suggest that providing chicks with access to variation in relevant resources could enhance their adaptive capacities and resistance to infection.
Simple Summary The benefits of rearing chicks in complex environments rather than barren environments are well established. However, the typical rearing environments for modern laying hens are still considerably more barren than the complex forest habitat of their ancestors. This small-scale experimental study investigated whether giving chicks of white Bovans Robust the possibility to express choices between different variants of the same resource could result in them being better able to cope with challenges, as well as being better able to make the most of new opportunities. We found that chicks with access to different types of litter and perches were less fearful, less chronically stressed, and were better prepared to cope with pathogenic challenges. Furthermore, they were more successful in a repeated opportunity test, implying an improved learning ability. Overall, the results suggest that rearing laying hen chicks in an environment with access to variation in relevant resources could be a simple and feasible way to increase complexity under commercial conditions. This input could result in them being more resistant to infection and better able to adapt to novel situations later in life. Early experience of a complex environment can improve biologically relevant traits related to coping abilities. However, the mechanisms underlying these positive effects have not been well explored. We hypothesized that giving chicks possibilities to express choices within relevant resources could be an important part of the mechanism, as well as a novel way to increase environmental complexity. In a balanced design, laying hen hatchlings of the white hybrid Bovans Robust were reared in a single-choice environment (single litter and perch type) or a multi-choice environment (four different litter and perch types). Immunological and behavioral indicators of chicks' coping abilities were explored in this experimental study at three weeks of age. Chicks from multi-choice environments had shorter durations of tonic immobility, lower heterophil/lymphocyte ratios, higher natural antibody concentrations, and were more successful in gaining novel food rewards in a repeated opportunity test. These results imply that chicks having access to variation within resource types were less fearful, experienced less chronic stress, would be more able to cope with pathogenic challenges, and potentially had an improved learning ability. To conclude, the more complex environment, achieved by increasing chicks' possibilities to choose, seemed to make chicks better prepared for potential challenges, boosting their adaptive capacities and their ability to make the most of opportunities.

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