Effects of dietary fibre and feeding frequency on wool biting and aggressive behaviours in housed Merino sheep
S. Vasseur A B , D. R. Paull A , S. J. Atkinson A , I. G. Colditz A and A. D. Fisher A CA CSIRO Livestock Industries, FD McMaster Laboratory Chiswick, Locked Bag 1, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia.
B INA P-G, Institut National Agronomique de Paris-Grignon, 16 rue Claude Bernard, 75 231 Paris Cédex 05, France.
C Corresponding author. Email: andrew.fisher@csiro.au
Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 46(7) 777-782 https://doi.org/10.1071/EA05320
Submitted: 17 November 2005 Accepted: 2 April 2006 Published: 8 June 2006
Abstract
Wool biting is a behaviour that can develop in housed sheep, in which sheep start to bite and eat the wool of others. The aim of this study was to determine whether (i) supplementing the diet of housed sheep with fibre and (ii) increasing feeding frequency would help to reduce wool biting, aggressive behaviours and wool damage. In a 2 × 2 factorial experiment, 40 Merino wethers were either fed with lucerne-based pellets only, or with pellets supplemented with barley straw. They received their pellets either on a low feeding frequency basis (once a day Monday to Friday mornings, double ration on Friday afternoon, nothing Saturdays and Sundays), or on a high feeding frequency basis (twice a day, every day). The sheep were housed in 4 treatment pens, each with 10 animals. Wool biting and aggressive behaviours were recorded through direct observation and the sheep were scored for wool damage twice a week during the 15-week study. The provision of fibre had a significant effect on reducing wool biting (P<0.001) and wool damage score (P<0.001). There was no consistent effect of feeding frequency on wool biting or wool damage, and no fibre × feeding frequency interactions. Whereas wool biting in general increased with time during the study (P<0.001), levels of aggressive behaviour showed no consistent time trend, and there were no effects of fibre or feeding frequency treatments. It is concluded that wool biting is largely a redirected behaviour in concentrate-fed housed sheep deprived of adequate levels of activity or oral stimulus, and that the provision of roughage will reduce the development of wool biting and improve animal welfare in housed experimental sheep.
Acknowledgments
We thank Christine Leger, Troy Kalinowski, Peter Bradley, Eliane Duflou, Jim Lea, Mandy Choice, Kerri Tyrrell and Sandra Eady for their assistance in the conduct of the study, as well as Laurie Piper and Brad Hine for their help in statistical analyses.
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