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The changing face and associated drivers of research on welfare of the gestating sow

Galli, M. C. and Gottardo, F. and Contiero, B. and Scollo, A. and Boyle, L. A.

Italian Journal of Animal Science (2021) 20: 2174–2187

DOI: 10.1080/1828051X.2021.2002732

Abstract

The housing and management of commercial breeding sows is of crucial importance for their productivity and welfare. The aim of the present study is to evaluate how the scientific community addressed the subject of pregnant sow welfare, how it has changed over the past 30 years and what were the drivers of this change. A search of the literature in Scopus identified 318 articles, which were screened for inclusion criteria. Over one hundred of these publications (n = 102) were deemed relevant for the systematic review. Globally, the number of papers on sow welfare during pregnancy increased, but in the last 5 years the trend changed both in terms of publishing country, the interventions studied and the welfare outcomes employed. Up to 2014, published papers about gestating sow welfare came from Europe and North America, with housing system as the most studied topic, followed by nutrition and feeding, and behaviour as the most common welfare outcome. In the last five years, publications from Europe and North America decreased, while publications from Oceania, America Latina and Asia started to appear. Papers on the management of sows in groups and to a lesser extent, environmental enrichment, increased in number. In addition, while prior to 2009 behaviour was the most common welfare outcome, a more diverse range of welfare outcomes were employed in papers in the last 10 years. In order to support new legislation and to respond to consumer requests, future studies should focus on improving sow comfort during gestation.

Citation

Galli, M. C., Gottardo, F., Contiero, B., Scollo, A., & Boyle, L. A. (2021). The changing face and associated drivers of research on welfare of the gestating sow. Italian Journal of Animal Science, 20(1), 2174–2187. https://doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2021.2002732 pregnancy, sows, systematic reviews, literature reviews, animal welfare, feeding behaviour, pig housing

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