Review: reducing handling stress improves both productivity and welfare

Review: reducing handling stress improves both productivity and welfare Grandin, Temple Includes bibliographical references (p. 13-21) Reducing stress on livestock during handling will help reduce sickness and enable cattle to go back on feed more quickly. Many detrimental effects of handling stressors on animal performance and health are likely due to fear. Practical experience on ranches and feedlots shows that making cattle accustomed to people both on foot and on horseback will produce calmer and easier to handle cattle. An animal's first experience with a new corral, a person, or pieces of equipment should be made as positive as possible. If a painful or very aversive procedure is done the first time, it may be difficult to persuade the animal to re-enter the facility. The following tips will improve handling: move small numbers of animals at a time, do not overload the crowd pen, eliminate electric prods, open anti-back gates, eliminate visual distractions that make animals balk, use flight zone and point of balance principles, and reduce noise. Colorado State University. Libraries 1998 Text application/pdf ANIStg100006.pdf FACFANIS100006ARTI eng c1998, American Registry of Professional Animal Scientists

Review: reducing handling stress improves both productivity and welfare

Grandin, Temple

Includes bibliographical references (p. 13-21)

Reducing stress on livestock during handling will help reduce sickness and enable cattle to go back on feed more quickly. Many detrimental effects of handling stressors on animal performance and health are likely due to fear. Practical experience on ranches and feedlots shows that making cattle accustomed to people both on foot and on horseback will produce calmer and easier to handle cattle. An animal's first experience with a new corral, a person, or pieces of equipment should be made as positive as possible. If a painful or very aversive procedure is done the first time, it may be difficult to persuade the animal to re-enter the facility. The following tips will improve handling: move small numbers of animals at a time, do not overload the crowd pen, eliminate electric prods, open anti-back gates, eliminate visual distractions that make animals balk, use flight zone and point of balance principles, and reduce noise.

Colorado State University. Libraries

1998

Text

application/pdf

ANIStg100006.pdf

FACFANIS100006ARTI

eng

c1998, American Registry of Professional Animal Scientists