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'Freedom from hunger' and preventing obesity: the animal welfare implications of reducing food quantity or quality

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Auteur
D'Eath, R. B.; Tolkamp, B. J.; Kyriazakis, I.; Lawrence, A. B.
Date
2009
DOI
10.1016/j.anbehav.2008.10.028
Sujet
chicken
diet
feeding behaviour
hunger
nutrition
obesity
pig
qualitative food restriction
stereotypy
GROUP-HOUSED SOWS
HIGH-FIBER DIETS
GROWING BROILER BREEDERS
FEED-INTAKE REGULATION
FED AD-LIBITUM
POINT-OF-VIEW
PREGNANT SOWS
ENERGY DENSITY
STEREOTYPIC BEHAVIOR
BLOOD-GLUCOSE
Behavioral Sciences
Zoology
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Résumé
In animals, including humans, free access to high-quality (generally energy-dense) food can result in obesity, leading to physiological and health problems. Consequently, various captive animals, including laboratory and companion animals and certain farm animals, are often kept on a restricted diet. Quantitative restriction of food is associated with signs of hunger such as increases in feeding motivation, activity and redirected oral behaviours which may develop into stereotypies. An alternative approach to energy intake restriction is to provide more food, but of a reduced quality. Such alternative diets are usually high in fibre and have lower energy density. The benefits of these alternative diets for animals are controversial: some authors argue that they result in more normal feeding behaviour, promote satiety and so improve animal welfare; others argue that 'metabolic hunger' remains no matter how the restriction of energy intake and weight gain is achieved. We discuss the different arguments behind this controversy, focusing on two well-researched cases of food-restricted farmed livestock: pregnant sows and broiler breeders. Disagreement between experts results from differences in assumptions about what determines and controls feeding behaviour and food intake, from the methodology of assessing animal hunger and from the weighting placed on 'naturalness' of behaviour as a determinant of welfare. Problems with commonly used behavioural and physiological measures of hunger are discussed. Future research into animal feeding preferences, in particular the relative weight placed on food quantity and quality, would be valuable, alongside more fundamental research into the changes in feeding physiology associated with alternative diets. (C) 2008 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/26952
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