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      Heritability of clinical tail-biting and its relation to performance traits

      , , , , , ,
      Livestock Production Science
      Elsevier BV

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          The relationship between tail biting in pigs, docking procedure and other management practices.

          The tail length (docked, tipped or undocked) and tail status (bitten or unbitten) of 27,870 pigs from 450 units was recorded at six UK abattoirs. A farm survey of the final finishing stage was used to investigate the relationship between management practice and tail biting. This showed that docking was the most important factor influencing the probability of being not bitten, with 2.4% of docked and 8.5% of long-tailed pigs being tail-bitten. The following factors reduced the probability of long-tailed pigs being tail-bitten; light straw provision, use of natural ventilation or artificially controlled natural ventilation (ACNV), mixed sex grouping, meal or liquid feeding, and use of double or multi-space feeders. Docked and long-tailed pigs provided with light straw and natural ventilation/ACNV had levels of tail biting of 1.2% and 4.3% respectively; 3.9% of docked pigs with artificial ventilation and no straw were tail-bitten. Long-tailed pigs fed via double or multi-space feeders also had 3.9% of tails bitten.
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            Incidence, location and interrelationships between the sites of abscesses recorded in pigs at a bacon factory in Northern Ireland.

            R Huey (1996)
            The position and incidence of all the abscesses detected during post mortem inspection of 75,130 bacon weight pigs were recorded. Abscesses were detected at one site only in 2.87 per cent of the carcases examined, and at more than one site in 0.26 per cent of the carcases. Tail biting was the cause of the infection in 61.7 per cent of all the carcases with lesions at more than one site. In almost all cases there was a statistically significant interrelationship between the visible abscesses at different sites.
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              The effect of breed on the development of adverse social behaviours in pigs

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Livestock Production Science
                Livestock Production Science
                Elsevier BV
                03016226
                April 2005
                April 2005
                : 93
                : 1
                : 87-94
                Article
                10.1016/j.livprodsci.2004.11.009
                f7332dd3-fde4-44e6-af9c-f44cf9822f24
                © 2005

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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