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Effects of stocking density on feather pecking and aggressive behavior in Thai crossbred chickens
Author(s) -
Xin Huo,
Pongchan Na-Lampang
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
agriculture and natural resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.319
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 2468-1458
pISSN - 2452-316X
DOI - 10.1016/j.anres.2016.04.006
Subject(s) - stocking , feather pecking , pecking order , crossbreed , zoology , biology , feather , veterinary medicine , ecology , medicine
The influence of stocking density on feather pecking and aggressive behavior of Thai crossbred chickens was investigated from age 4–12 wk. In total, 900 day-old mixed sex Thai crossbred chickens were assigned to three replicates of 100 birds per pen, at stocking densities of 8 birds/m2, 12 birds/m2 and 16 birds/m2, respectively. The frequency of feather pecking, the number of pecks per bout, pecking intensity and the frequency of aggressive behavior were recorded once a week by scanning all the birds in the pen. It was found that the stocking density had no effect on the frequencies of feather pecking on body areas except on the wings area (p < 0.05). The stocking density had no effect on the occurrence of 1–4 pecks per bout or 5–9 pecks per bout. The stocking density had no significant influence on the pecking, pinching or plucking intensity, except on the intensity of pulling. The different types of aggressive behavior such as stand-off, fight, threat, leap, chase, avoidance and peck were not affected by the stocking density. In conclusion, stocking density did not affect the feather pecking activities and aggressive behavior of Thai crossbred chickens. However, further work is suggested with a larger number of replications to establish that there is no effect of stocking density, as the power of this study was low

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