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Animal husbandry and Human-animal relationshipsPain Management

Causes of pig aggression and how to reduce it for better welfare

By February 8th 2022February 23rd, 2022No Comments

Document type : Article published in Farmers Weekly Interactive (UK)

Author: Jonathan Riley

  

  

  

  


Preview: Aggression among grouped pigs can cause stress, growth checks, suppressed immunity, injury and even death. Researchers Simon Turner and Lucy Oldham from Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) have urged pig farmers to tackle aggression in herds to improve health, welfare and performance.[...]The injuries suffered are presumably painful and the conflicts stressful, so it is a significant welfare issue for the animals involved, Dr Turner suggests.


Why does aggression occur?
Pigs fight to assert their dominance over other animals in the herd. [...] While males take longer to engage in an attack, once they do fight, they don't back down and injuries sustained are more severe, says Dr Turner. This pattern harks back to male breeding competition for females in wild herds, where significant bouts of combat occur to assert dominance and breeding rights.
Genetics also influence aggression levels. Studies have found that 20-40% of aggression in pigs is linked to genetics, with the remainder due to the environment.
Key environmental triggers within already stable groups include shortages of a resource such as space, feed, water, warmth, and dry or clean areas in the pen. These can become points of conflict, says animal and vet science researcher Lucy Oldham.


When does aggression occur?
Most attacks occur when a stable hierarchy changes. Therefore, most aggression is seen in the first 24-48 hours after groups have been mixed together and unfamiliar pigs come into contact for the first time, Ms Oldham says. After this time the group generally settles. However, SRUC has raised concerns over an emerging trend where extreme attacks are occurring in stable groups of pigs. Seen worldwide, the attacks are typified by groups of pigs singling out an individual within a pen. The attacks are prolonged, ferocious and result in the death of the victim. [...]How can farms reduce aggressive outbreaks?
- Pre-weaning mixing
Most farms mix litters of pigs into groups immediately after weaning. This is where aggression can often first show up as pigs fight to regain dominance within the newly formed groups. However, research has shown that aggression within established litters is low and levels remain suppressed up to weaning. This behaviour provides an opportunity to limit fighting at mixing by introducing litters at about two weeks old while they are still on the sow.
Opening a piglet-sized hole in the barrier between two adjacent pens, allowing piglets to mingle, allows them to form stable groups before aggressive behaviour kicks in.
There is also evidence that early social mixing enhances social skills, which are retained. This means less aggression is seen even when early socialised pigs meet new, unfamiliar pigs.
- Regrouping
Although regrouping pigs later in the cycle allows farmers to manage feeding regimes more accurately, it can lead to significant aggression and stress among batches, Dr Turner says. It can also increase the risk of spreading disease, so ideally regrouping should be avoided. Where there is no alternative, pigs should be regrouped as young as possible.
- Pens
Optimising space is extremely important - particularly at mixing. Pigs need enough space to be able to retreat from an aggressor. With an area to escape into, any battles are more likely to be short-lived, allowing the hierarchy to establish with less stress and injury. Barriers can also be included if a pen is large enough to give the beleaguered pig somewhere to retreat to. Boards or straw bales can significantly reduce injuries. Further enrichment of the pen, to occupy pigs and distract them from fighting, can also help. However, SRUC urges caution on what is supplied. Toys can be successful but can also become objects that pigs will fight over, says Ms Oldham. It is better to offer something like straw that cannot be dominated by one or two aggressive pigs, she suggests.

From the Farmers Weekly Interactive website