
Stockmanship and farm animal welfare
X Boivin*1, J Lensink2,
C Tallet1 and I Veissier1
Abstract
Human factors (attitudes, personality traits, self-esteem, job satisfaction)
strongly determine our behaviour towards animals, animal production
and animal welfare.
Recent studies have emphasised positive human contacts as indicators
of a stockperson’s positive attitude towards animals and towards
animal welfare in general. Stockmanship can be improved by careful selection
of people and/or by training. However, little is known of the biological
basis of the effect of stock handling procedures on the welfare of animals.
The animal’s perception of the stockperson (based both on emotional
responses and cognitive aspects such as anticipation, recognition and
categorisation), and the existence of sensitive periods in an animal’s
life, need to be explored in more depth, especially under farm conditions.
We need to consider the complexity of human behaviour (eg husbandry
practices, balance between positive and negative interactions, predictability,
controllability) and its effect on animal welfare from the animal’s
point of view throughout its whole life.
This paper identifies the importance of positive human contacts for
both animals and stockpeople, and highlights the challenge to maintain
such positive contacts despite the trend in modern agriculture to increase
the number of animals per stockperson. This requires better knowledge
of animal genetics, socialisation to humans during sensitive periods,
and management of the social group. We emphasise the ethical importance
of the human–animal relationship in the context of farm animal
welfare and productivity.
Source
Animal Welfare 2003, 12: 479-492
1 URH-ACS, INRA de Theix, F-63122 St Genés Champanelle,
France
2 Institut Supérieur d’Agriculture, 41
Rue du Port, F-59046 Lille cedex, France
* Contact for correspondence and requests for reprints: xavier@clermont.inra.fr
Posted May 2007