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Supporting Poultry Welfare During Housing Orders

21 November 2024

Poultry are intelligent animals and need to be able to exhibit natural behaviours, otherwise they can express undesirable behaviours. During recent housing orders, in which the Government mandated that all poultry be kept inside in an effort to reduce the spread of Avian Influenza, many keepers noticed increased incidence of undesirable behaviours such as feather pecking. Enrichments can help reduce stress in your poultry and encourage normal behaviour.

What causes undesirable behaviours?

Feather pecking is an abnormal behaviour where hens peck each other, which can lead to feather loss and skin damage. This can then lead to injurious pecking where the birds start to harm one another which can result in death and cannibalism.

Feather pecking can be caused by many factors, but is generally linked to a stressor, such as: inadequate housing, lack of suitable foraging material, high temperatures, poor quality litter, changes in environment (housing order forcing keepers to house birds that are used to being allowed to range), changes in feed/poor nutrition, uneven flock uniformity, poor animal health and external parasites such as red mite.

Therefore, it is vital to address the potential stressors above, particularly for birds that are used to being able to range previously.  As a result of any housing orders, the lack of range access can reduce exhibition of natural behaviours. Utilising enrichments can help reduce stress in your poultry, encourage normal behaviour such as foraging, and reduce abnormal feather pecking behaviour.

Figure 1 - Lucerne Bales
Figure 1 - Lucerne Bales

Enrichments

Enrichments are an important tool in a poultry keepers’ arsenal to control undesirable behaviours and allow the poultry to exhibit natural behaviours while housed. Destructible enrichments such as egg trays, lucerne bales or other fibre source, pecking blocks and jute rope are preferable as the bird gets feedback (destructible) and depending on the material some can be eaten.

Other options which are relatively commonly used in the poultry industry are plastic bottles filled with coloured liquid, footballs, parking cones, CDs hanging from the ceiling and other non-destructible materials. These options are less desirable as there is less positive feedback and some are not safe for the chickens to consume.

Figure 2 - Jute Rope
Figure 2 - Jute Rope
Figure 3 - Pecking Block
Figure 3 - Pecking Block

Top Tips

  1. Inspect your poultry regularly – monitor their behaviour and look for signs of undesirable behaviour such as feather pecking.
  2. Investigate potential causes for any undesirable behaviour: is the ventilation adequate, is the litter dry and loose, has the diet changed, have there been high temperatures in the housing etc.?
  3. Correct any potential causes of undesirable behaviour found in tip 2.
  4. Utilise enrichments as a preventative measure not just as a treatment for undesirable behaviour.
  5. Use destructible/edible enrichments where possible versus non-destructible/inedible enrichments.

James Orr, SAC Consulting

Further Information

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