Journal article

Natural behaviours, their drivers and their implications for laying hen welfare

Paul H Hemsworth, Lauren E Edwards

ANIMAL PRODUCTION SCIENCE | CSIRO PUBLISHING | Published : 2020

Abstract

Some believe that farm animals need to be kept in conditions that provide ‘natural’ aspects in the animal’s environment and, thus, provide the opportunity for the animals to perform their full ‘behavioural repertoire’. Captivity may restrict either behaviours that animals have instinctive, intrinsic propensities to perform whatever the environment or behaviours that are elicited by deficits in the animals’ environment. Behavioural restriction may also thwart general motivation to seek variety and/or avoid monotonous conditions. Appreciating whether an animal suffers if deprived of the opportunity to perform natural behaviour requires, first, an understanding of how the behaviour in question ..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

The paper is part of the Laying Hen Welfare special issue of Animal Production Science. This paper was developed from a review by the author prepared as part of a series of reviews requested by Australian Eggs Limited. PHH received no specific funding for this review but LEE received funding from the Australian Eggs Limited for her contribution to the original paper in this series of reviews.