Welfare

 Industry Partners


Prairie Swine Centre is an affiliate of the University of Saskatchewan


Prairie Swine Centre is grateful for the assistance of the George Morris Centre in developing the economics portion of Pork Insight.

Financial support for the Enterprise Model Project and Pork Insight has been provided by:



Author(s): Morven A. McLeman, Michael T. Mendl b, R. Bryan Jones c, Christopher M. Wathes
Publication Date: January 1, 2008
Reference: Applied Animal Behaviour Science 115 (2008) 123–137
Country: United States

Summary:

A non-invasive method was developed to study the transmission of cues that are used in social
discrimination by pigs, Sus scrofa. We investigated the ability of juvenile pigs to discriminate between
pairs of familiar, similar-aged conspecifics in a Y-maze learning task, using either single or paired visual,
olfactory and auditory cues. The stimulus pigs (n = 12) were littermates that were familiar but unrelated to
the test pigs (n = 12). For the bimodal task, test pigs (four per treatment) were presented with cues of two
modalities: olfaction and vision (OV), vision and audition (AV), or audition and olfaction (AO).
Approaches to a pre-determined correct stimulus were rewarded with food in daily sessions, each of
10 consecutive trials. Three consecutive successful sessions of 8/10 correct choices (P = 0.00016)
fulfilled the criterion for starting the unimodal task, during which test pigs were given either olfactory,
visual or auditory cues only using the same success criterion. Eight pigs learnt the bimodal task (OV: 4,AV:
2,AO: 2) ofwhich six pigs subsequently completed the unimodal task successfully (O: 3,V: 2, A: 1). These
findings indicate that juvenile pigs have the cognitive capacity to discriminate between same-sex
littermates that are also familiar group-members in the absence of either visual, olfactory or auditory cues, and that some can use just one of these modalities. A larger-scale study is needed to determine the sensory hierarchy of social discrimination in pigs.

For more information the full article can be found at http://journals.elsevierhealth.com/periodicals/applan/issues

You must be logged in to post a comment.

 
 
Slots Master There is no definite strategy or technique that you can use as you play slots