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Behavioral, physiological, and hormonal responses during pre-slaughter handling in goats: a comparison between trained and untrained handlers


Citation

Kumar, Pavan and Abubakar, Ahmed Abubakar and Ahmed, Muideen Adewale and Hayat, Muhammad Nizam and Halim, Fakhrullah Abd and Rahman, Md Moklesur and Ajat, Mokrish and Kaka, Ubedullah and Goh, Yong-Meng and Sazili, Awis Qurni (2024) Behavioral, physiological, and hormonal responses during pre-slaughter handling in goats: a comparison between trained and untrained handlers. Animal Bioscience, 37 (11). pp. 2000-2007. ISSN 2765-0189; eISSN: 2765-0235

Abstract

Objective: The livestock handler attitude and their handling of animals is crucial for improving animal welfare standards, minimizing stress, improving productivity and meat quality. The present study was undertaken to assess the effect of training livestock handlers on behavioral, physiological, and hormonal responses during preslaughter handling in goats. Methods: A total of 6 handlers were divided into trained (trained in basic animal handling practices, animal behavior, and animal welfare), contact trained (not trained directly but interacted and saw the working of trained handlers), and untrained groups (no formal training). The handling experiment was conducted on 18 male goats by following a cross-over design. The goats were moved from lairage to slaughter point by trained, contact-trained, and untrained handlers. Various behavioral, physiological, and hormonal parameters were recorded at the lairage before handling and at the slaughter point after handling the goats. Results: The training of livestock handlers had a significant effect on behavioral, physiological, and hormonal responses in goats. The goats handled by untrained and contact-trained handlers were recorded with intense vocalization, significant (p<0.05) increase in heart rate and blood glucose, and catecholamines (adrenaline and nor-adrenaline), thereby indicating stress and poor animal welfare. The trained handlers were observed to use visual interactions (waving of hands or objects, blocking, hand raising, etc), and lower stress responses were recorded in the goats handled by this group. Conclusion: The present study highlights the importance of training to livestock handlers in improving animal welfare and minimizing stress in goats during pre-slaughter stress.


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Additional Metadata

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Faculty of Agriculture
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Food Security
DOI Number: https://doi.org/10.5713/ab.24.0050
Publisher: Asian Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies
Keywords: Animal handler; Physiological responses; Preslaughter handling; Training; Welfare
Depositing User: Ms. Nuraida Ibrahim
Date Deposited: 17 Jun 2025 03:22
Last Modified: 17 Jun 2025 03:22
Altmetrics: http://www.altmetric.com/details.php?domain=psasir.upm.edu.my&doi=10.5713/ab.24.0050
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/117932
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