
Forced to crowd or choosing to cluster? Spatial distribution
indicates social attraction in broiler chickens
Kian febrer *, Tracey A. Jones *, Christl A. Donnelly†
& Marian Stamp Dawkins *
*Department of Zoology, University of Oxford; †Department of
Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Imperial College
Abstract
We investigated the response of commercially farmed broiler (meat) chickens
to their social environment at five stocking densities, using spatial
distribution and behaviour.
We used a computer model in which a ‘social aversion/attraction’
parameter was set at different values to give simulations in which the
chickens were averse, indifferent or positively attracted to each other.
We examined the spatial distribution of real chickens that were neither
feeding nor drinking, using video records taken within commercial houses,
to see which setting of the model best fitted the observed data.
At all stocking densities, chickens were more clustered than indifferent
(randomly distributed) chickens, and their distribution best fitted
a social attraction model in which simulated birds rejected a potential
position if their distance from other birds was too great.
The parameter setting that best fitted the observed data was a model
in which simulated chickens had a high probability of rejecting a position
if the nearest chicken was more than an estimated 75 cm away: they were
socially attracted rather than socially averse.
This result suggests that, even at high commercial stocking densities,
real broiler chickens may find the close proximity of other birds more
attractive than aversive.
Except for jostling and number of strides per walking bout, behaviour
did not change across the stocking densities studied, nor, except for
gait, did the most obvious measures of bird health (mortality, culls,
leg health).
Source
Animal Behaviour, Volume 72, Issue 6, December 2006, Pages 1291-1300
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Posted November 2007