Feeding management of giraffe towards positive welfare

Uloženo v:
Podrobná bibliografie
Název: Feeding management of giraffe towards positive welfare
Autoři: Depauw, Sarah, Verbist, Leen, Stevens, Jeroen, Salas, Marina
Informace o vydavateli: EAZA, the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria, 2023.
Rok vydání: 2023
Témata: STEREOTYPIES, Science & Technology, CAMELOPARDALIS, Giraffe, SLEEP, VARIABLES, DIET, RELEVANCE, CAPTIVE GIRAFFE, Positive welfare, Captive management, feeding strategy, Zoo welfare, Veterinary Sciences, giraffe positive welfare, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Zoology, BEHAVIOR, RUMINATION, Nutrition
Popis: This study prioritised positive affective states while modifying the feeding management of five giraffes at Zoo Planckendael and monitored the impact on indicators of both negative and positive welfare. Observations were conducted day and night over a 10-day winter period before and one year after implementing the following feeding management changes: 1) increased fibre and decreased sugar and starch content in the diet; 2) inclusion of five browse species year-round, accounting for a minimum 10% of total dry matter intake, including browse with thorns; 3) increased daily feeding frequency (from two to three times) of pellets, produce and browse, with the highest browse provision in the evening; and 4) all food offered required tongue manipulation. Results indicate improved positive welfare, with significant increases in daytime feeding (from 24.5% to 43.4% of observed time), night-time feeding (from 17.6% to 28.7%) and nocturnal rumination (from 26.7% to 38.7%), and the complete replacement of mouth feeding with tongue feeding. Oral abnormal repetitive behaviours decreased during the day (from 2.9% to 2.0%) and significantly decreased at night (from 1.0% to 0.6%). The absence of recumbency during the day might indicate negative welfare and warrants further investigation. Overall, the Five Domains animal welfare model proved valuable in optimising feeding strategies that promote positive affective states like pleasure, gastrointestinal comfort and engagement, which led to increased positive welfare in giraffes after implementing the new feeding management regime. Round-the-clock observations and positive welfare indicators provide broader insights into giraffe welfare, highlighting potential for future zoo nutrition research
sponsorship: Acknowledgements The authors gratefully acknowledge Marjolein Osieck for coordination of the observations as well as Roxanna van Riemsdijk and all giraffe zookeepers for their cooperation during the transfer in feeding management. In particular, the authors thank Anke Vaesen, Caroline Heylen, Claire De Witte and Lobke Verschooren for help during observations. The Antwerp Zoo Centre for Research and Conservation is structurally funded by the Flemish government. (Flemish government)
Druh dokumentu: Article
Jazyk: English
DOI: 10.19227/jzar.v11i4.769
Přístupová URL adresa: https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/20.500.12942/733939
Rights: CC BY
Přístupové číslo: edsair.od......1131..20485e6ff7f1c3b8cc59a619e63e22c6
Databáze: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:This study prioritised positive affective states while modifying the feeding management of five giraffes at Zoo Planckendael and monitored the impact on indicators of both negative and positive welfare. Observations were conducted day and night over a 10-day winter period before and one year after implementing the following feeding management changes: 1) increased fibre and decreased sugar and starch content in the diet; 2) inclusion of five browse species year-round, accounting for a minimum 10% of total dry matter intake, including browse with thorns; 3) increased daily feeding frequency (from two to three times) of pellets, produce and browse, with the highest browse provision in the evening; and 4) all food offered required tongue manipulation. Results indicate improved positive welfare, with significant increases in daytime feeding (from 24.5% to 43.4% of observed time), night-time feeding (from 17.6% to 28.7%) and nocturnal rumination (from 26.7% to 38.7%), and the complete replacement of mouth feeding with tongue feeding. Oral abnormal repetitive behaviours decreased during the day (from 2.9% to 2.0%) and significantly decreased at night (from 1.0% to 0.6%). The absence of recumbency during the day might indicate negative welfare and warrants further investigation. Overall, the Five Domains animal welfare model proved valuable in optimising feeding strategies that promote positive affective states like pleasure, gastrointestinal comfort and engagement, which led to increased positive welfare in giraffes after implementing the new feeding management regime. Round-the-clock observations and positive welfare indicators provide broader insights into giraffe welfare, highlighting potential for future zoo nutrition research<br />sponsorship: Acknowledgements The authors gratefully acknowledge Marjolein Osieck for coordination of the observations as well as Roxanna van Riemsdijk and all giraffe zookeepers for their cooperation during the transfer in feeding management. In particular, the authors thank Anke Vaesen, Caroline Heylen, Claire De Witte and Lobke Verschooren for help during observations. The Antwerp Zoo Centre for Research and Conservation is structurally funded by the Flemish government. (Flemish government)
DOI:10.19227/jzar.v11i4.769