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Original research
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Peer reviewed
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An observational study
on tail biting in commercial
grower-finisher barns
Spyridon K. Kritas,
DVM, PhD; Robert B. Morrison, DVM, MBA, PhD
SKK: Clinic of Medicine,
School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Thessaly, 43100 Karditsa, Greece;
RBM: Department of Clinical and Population Sciences, College of Veterinary
Medicine, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55108. Corresponding author:
Dr S.K. Kritas, Clinic of Medicine, School of Veterinary Medicine, University
of Thessaly, 43100 Karditsa, Greece; Tel: 24410-66003; Fax: 24410-66055;
E-mail: skritas@vet.uth.gr
Cite as: Kritas
SK, Morrison RB. An observational study on tail biting in commercial grower-finisher
barns. J Swine Health Prod. 2004;12(1):17-22.
Also
available as a PDF.
Summary
Objectives: To describe the prevalence of bitten tails and determine
risk factors at pig and pen level in barns with a history of high incidence
of tail biting.
Methods: In two finishing barns, prevalence and severity of tail-biting
lesions in docked pigs and association of bitten tails with gender were determined
in a cross-sectional study. The associations with space allowance per pig,
animal density, and barrow:gilt ratio per pen were examined. A matched case-control
study determined the association between length of tail, severity of lesions
on bitten tails, and chest girth (a surrogate measure of body weight).
Results: In a total of 1895 pigs (58% barrows, 42% gilts), the prevalence
of bitten tails was 16.3% (barrows 21%; gilts 9.4%). The odds of being a bitten
barrow was 2.6 times higher than being a bitten gilt (P < .001).
Approximately 60% of affected pigs of both genders had severe lesions. Neither
prevalence nor severity of lesions was associated with space allowance, animal
density, or barrow:gilt ratio within pen. The prevalence of bitten barrows
was positively correlated with the percentage of gilts in the pen (r = 0.56, P =
.001). Severely bitten pigs had significantly smaller chest girth than less
affected pigs. No association of the severity of lesions with length of the
tail was observed.
Implications: Under the conditions of this study, the incidence of
tail-biting lesions in barrows was more than twice that in gilts. Severely
bitten pigs were smaller than pen mates. Sorting by gender may help reduce
tail biting.
Keywords: swine, tail
biting, prevention
Search the AASV web site
for pages with similar keywords.
Received: October
12, 2002
Accepted: June
6, 2003
Tail biting is one of the most common problems in
confinement herds, for which no satisfactory control or treatment program exists.
In many cases, substantial costs are incurred due to secondary infection and
deteriorating body condition of affected pigs. In an
abattoir study, 8.5 to 9.2% of undocked pigs were tail bitten, and tail-bitten
pigs
had significantly more carcass damage compared to unbitten
ones.1,2 Tail biting was determined as the primary cause of
multi-site abscesses found in carcasses at
slaughter.3 The cost of tail biting also includes
increased labor for transferring bitten pigs to
recovery pens and applying medical treatment.
Another consequence of tail biting is the negative effect on the health and welfare
of bitten pigs.3.4 Pigs that become tail
biters may also be negatively affected, as the
frustration of living in a stressful environment may be the motivation for biting the
tails of pen mates.5
Despite much research, the specific factors that precipitate tail biting are
not fully understood. Imbalanced diet (particularly protein and minerals),
discomfort
(eg, excessive temperature variation, drafts, noise), overcrowding, noxious gases
in the barn, and a high proportion of slatted flooring have all been associated
with higher frequencies of tail
biting.2,5-7 The length of the tail appears to be an
important factor. Hunter et al1,2 reported that
tail docking reduced the prevalence of tail biting from a range of 8.5 to 9.2%
to a range of 2.4 to 3.1%. Other factors reported to reduce the probability
of undocked
pigs being tail bitten are light straw provision, use of natural ventilation
or artificially controlled natural ventilation, mixed gender grouping, feeding
of meal or
liquid feed, the use of double or multi-space feeders,and low prevalence of diseases
in the herd.2,7
Much of the information on tail biting has been derived from slaughterhouses
and surveys. These approaches have some important benefits, such as the large
number of cases, but they may not always
accurately represent conditions in the barns of
origin. Pigs with severely bitten tails are
sometimes slaughtered locally and thus are not included in such
studies.2 The purpose of this study was to describe the prevalence
of bitten tails and determine risk factors at pig and pen levels in two barns where
there had been a high incidence of tail biting.
Materials and methods
Housing
This study was conducted in two identical finishing barns of a large swine
enterprise. The barns were located 50 m apart at
the same site. Each barn had 16 pens on each side (32 pens total per barn). Pens were
3 m x 7.2 m (21.6 m2), with fully
slatted floors. Each pen had one five-space feeder and two bowl-type drinkers. Four pens
in each barn were initially reserved for sick pigs. Barns had automatically
controlled natural ventilation, with curtains on
both sides of the building. Six large circulating fans were distributed along the
south (long) side of each building.
Management
At 3 to 5 days of age, all pigs were tail docked and male pigs were castrated.
Pigs were weaned at approximately 21 days old, and at approximately 70 days old,
they were transferred from the nurseries to the finishing barns, where they stayed
until slaughter age. Pigs were allocated to finisher pens (except the sick pens),
irrespective of gender, in groups of approximately 36 to 38. Feed was provided ad
libitum.All in-all out flow was applied by site. All
pigs originated from the daughter nucleus herd of the enterprise. Pigs were vaccinated
for Salmonella cholerasuis and Lawsonia
intracellularis 3 weeks after entering the finishing barns.
Cross-sectional study
A cross-sectional study was designed to determine the prevalence and severity
of bitten tails within the barns, and association of bitten tails with gender. For this
purpose, we recorded gender and individual tail score of all pigs in each pen in both
barns on one occasion, 7 weeks after placement in finishing barns. A scale from 0 to 4
was used for tail scoring, with a score of 4 for the most severe lesions, as described
in Table 1 and illustrated in Figures 1A through 1F.

Chi square analysis was used to test the association between gender and having
a bitten tail. The severity of lesions on bitten tails was recorded collectively per pen
by calculating a pen biting score as follows: Pen biting score = ([1
x Number of pigs in pen scored 1] + [2 x Number of pigs in
pen scored 2] + [3 x Number of pigs in pen scored 3] + [4
x Number of pigs in pen scored 4]) (Number of all pigs in
pen). Multiple regression analysis was conducted,using pen as the unit, to
investigate associations of prevalence of bitten tails and severity of lesions (pen
biting score) with three factors: space allowance per pig, number of pigs in the pen
(animal density), and the barrow:gilt ratio within each pen. All pens were included except
six in Barn 1 and 10 in Barn 2, which served as sick pens at the time of measurement.
Case-control study
To determine the association of the severity of lesions of tail biting with
body weight and the length of the tails, a matched case-control study was
designed. In addition
to tail score and tail length, chest girths of bitten pigs and of matched
nonbitten control pigs were measured. The matched control was the first nonbitten
pig in the pen observed approaching the drinker after each measurement of
a bitten pig. In
pens where the number of tail-bitten pigs exceeded the number of unbitten pigs,
the necessary matched control pigs were selected from the adjoining pen using
the same principle.
Tail length was measured as the distance from the base of the tail to the end of
the tail, with the ventral side of the tail stretched onto a rigid ruler. Body
weight was estimated by measuring chest girth.
To correlate chest girth (measured in cm) with body weight in pounds, a pilot
study was conducted in 130 pigs of the same genetic background in a finishing
barn of
a different system. A tape measure was used to measure the perimeter of the chest
just behind the front limbs in pigs weighing 45 to 125 kg. Pigs were then
weighed
individually on an electronic scale accurate to 1
lb, and weights were converted to kg. The correlation between girth and body
weight was 0.94 (P < .001). Linear regression
was performed to determine the following equation that was used to transform
girth (cm) to body weight: Body weight (kg) = (1.76
x girth) - 94.
A total of 119 of 136 bitten pigs and 119 matched controls in Barn 1 and 94 of
173 bitten pigs and 94 matched controls in Barn 2 were included in the weight
analysis. Some bitten pigs were not included
because it was not possible to get a measurement. This was particularly true in Barn 2, as
approximately 80 of the bitten pigs had been transferred to sick pens where they
were not easily approached. Pigs in sick pens were housed in groups of 2 to 11 in Barn
1 and in groups of 1 to 20 in Barn 2.
All measurements and scoring throughout the study were performed by the same
person. A main effects ANOVA was performed to determine the association between
chest girth and tail length as dependent variables and individual tail score as
independent variable, while controlling for the effects
of barn and gender. Duncan's multiple range test was used to compare mean chest
girth and tail length measurements among tail scores. The level of significance was set
at P < .05.
All statistical analyses were performed using Statistica Software (Kernel Release
5.5, Edition 99; StatSoft Inc, Tulsa, Oklahoma).
Results
Cross-sectional study
A total of 1895 pigs, of which 58% were barrows and 42% were gilts, were
evaluated in both barns (Table 2). The average
prevalence of bitten tails was 13.5% in Barn 1 and 19.4% in Barn 2
(P < .05), and the average prevalence on the site was
16.3%. The range of within-pen prevalence on the site was 0 to 66.7%. The prevalence
of bitten tails was higher in barrows than in gilts (Table 2). The odds of being
a bitten
barrow was 2.6 times higher than being a bitten gilt
(P < .05). Approximately 60% of the affected pigs of both genders had
severely bitten tails, scored as 3 or 4. In both genders, the most frequently
recorded
score was 3 (Figure 2). Most bitten pigs were in good condition and alert at
the time of measurement, but in some cases, severely bitten pigs (mainly scored
as 4) were
moribund, sometimes bleeding continuously from the tail (Figure 1F), or suffering
from infection apparent associated with the traumatized tail (Figure 1E).

For the pen-basis analysis, a total of 1711 pigs, of which 993 (58%) were
barrows and 718 (42%) were gilts, were counted in 48 pens (22 to 44 pigs per
pen).
Space allowance ranged from 0.49 to 0.98
m2 per pig, and the frequency distribution of
pigs per pen was approximately normal (Figure 3). The average prevalence of bitten
tails per pen was 12.9% for Barn 1, 16.5% for Barn 2, and 14.5% for the site.
Neither prevalence nor severity of lesions on
bitten tails (pen biting score) was associated
with space allowance, animal density, or the ratio of barrows to gilts within
each pen. The prevalence of bitten barrows was positively correlated with the
percentage of
gilts in the pen (r = 0.56, P = .001).
Case-control study
In Barn 1, average estimated body weight was 80.6 kg for barrows (n=163) and
77.4 kg for gilts (n=75). Average body weight was higher
(P < .05) in Barn 2: 86.2 kg for barrows (n=102) and 82.2 kg for
gilts (n=86).
Tail score was significantly associated with chest girth. Pigs with tail score 1 had
larger girth measurements than pigs with score 0
(P < .05), and as tail score increased from
1 to 4, girth measurement decreased. Severely affected pigs (scores 3 and 4) had
smaller girth measurements than pigs that were
less severely affected or unbitten (P < .05)
(Figure 4).
No clear association between severity of tail-biting lesions and length of the tail
of the affected pigs was detected (P > .05).
Discussion
Tail biting is a complex behavioral condition that may cause substantial economic
losses due to slow growth, carcass devaluation, and increased cost for labor
and
medication. A barren or uncomfortable environment (eg, uncontrolled air draughts)
appears to provide the initial stimulus for this behavior,with subsequent
attraction of
pen mates to the blood.8,9 Enrichment of
the environment appears to be critical in reducing tail
biting.2,7,10-12
Several abattoir studies have recorded a high prevalence of tail-biting lesions
in undocked pigs (7.4 to 11.6% on average) compared to 2.4 to 3.1% in pigs
with docked tails.1,2,13,14 Furthermore,
Hunter and co-workers1,2 compared farms
with variable management practices with regard to the prevalence of tail biting,
and observed that prevalence may be lower where there
is optimal combination of such practices. Thus, for example, farms with natural
or artificially controlled natural ventilation and light straw provision had
a
prevalence of 4.3% when tail docking was not
performed, and 1.2% when tail docking was
performed.1,2 In the present on-farm study,
however, although all pigs were docked and several parameters reported to be
beneficial were applied (eg, artificially controlled natural ventilation, meal-type
feed,
multi-space feeders), the prevalence of bitten tails
was six times higher than that reported in docked pigs in the other studies.
It may
be that this difference is simply due to a "dilution effect" of severely
affected barns mixed with less affected in the slaughterhouse studies. It could
also be that
some risk factors, such as the barren environment described earlier,
predispose to others. Recently, Moinard and
co-workers7 studied risk factors for tail biting among farms
and described provision of light straw as the most important, followed by the
level of postweaning mortality in the farm, type of floor, tail docking, type
of feeder,
and stocking density.
Prompted by previous observations that tail docking reduced tail
biting,1,2 we thought that tail length would be an important
risk factor in our study. Thus, we expected that the longer the tail, the higher
the biting score would be. It is possible that tail length or the variability
of tail
lengths observed in this study (range 5 to 9.5 cm) was not large enough to affect
tail biting
or to permit clearer observations. Hunter and
co-workers1,2 examined tails with more variable lengths, eg, docked
(shorter
than 10 cm) and undocked or tipped (longer than 10 cm). In
contrast, others have observed that tail biting increases with
tail docking.7,15 Apparently such
different observations are largely due to the
different sources of data (slaughterhouse
versus farm, surveys versus studies, recording of simply biting versus multiple
severe biting).
An interesting finding was that the prevalence of tail biting in barrows was
twice that observed in gilts. This confirms observations in slaughterhouse
surveys.1,13,14,16 It is not clear why this occurs. Our impression
was that most gilts preferred face-to-face contact with strangers (eg, the person
measuring chest girth), instead of turning to face
the opposite direction, as was the case with most barrows. Wallgren and
Lindahl17 suggested that during fighting,
females confront face-to-face. If this occurs in a conflict situation, the barrow
tails will be readily exposed to the biters (ie, when attacked by a gilt, a
barrow will turn
his back rather than face her, but another gilt will meet her face-to-face).
Moreover, the finding that the prevalence of bitten barrows - but not that of
bitten gilts -
increased with increasing proportion of gilts in a
pen may indicate that gilts are more prone to bite the tails of barrows in mixed
pens. However, other researchers did not find evidence that a particular gender
ratio encourages tail-biting behavior.18
These results suggest that it is better to
separate genders and, if this is not possible, to
avoid placing a much larger proportion of gilts in the pens. Studies should be
designed for confirming behavior of genders, possibly also considering the genetic
backgrounds
of the animals. For example, in the herd in this study, the owner observed that
tail biting constantly occurred in non-select breeding stock and multiplication
barrows, but not in commercial pigs. Moinard and
co-workers7 have suggested that genetics
is one factor associated with tail biting.
Our finding that severely bitten pigs were significantly lighter (ie, had
smaller chest girth measurements) than less severely
bitten and unbitten pigs raises the question of whether low body weight is a
cause or a result of severe tail biting. It has been suggested that larger
pigs are usually
better biting targets and that the initial biters
are the smallest pigs of the group.19 It may
be that the fast growing, less active, and less anxious pigs are generally less
responsive to having other pigs nosing or chewing on their bodies, and only
after they
incur severe injuries do their growth rates
decline. On the other hand, however, smaller pigs or sick pigs may be more reluctant
to defend themselves against being bitten. It has been reported that tail biting
is
more prevalent in farms with high postweaning mortality and high incidence of
respiratory disease.7 Prospective behavioral studies
to observe development of tail biting activity from the time the pigs are placed
in
the finisher until close to slaughter age might clarify this issue.
The size of the group may affect tail biting via hierarchy establishment. An
unstable social hierarchy may contribute to social stress and discomfort and may be
observed to a greater degree in medium-sized
groups (20 to 40 pigs) than in smaller or larger
groups.20 It has also been suggested
that reduction in space allowance is far more important in establishment of a social
hierarchy than increase in group
size.20 It has been observed that a stocking
density greater than 110 kg per m2 increased
the risk of tail biting by a factor of
2.7.7 In our study, both group size (22 to 44 pigs
per pen) and stocking density (85 to 170 kg per
m2) were not optimal and therefore constituted important risk factors for
tail biting. However, neither group size nor space allowance appeared to affect
prevalence and severity of tail-biting lesions,
possibly because variability in these parameters
was not wide enough to permit detection of differences.
The higher the prevalence of tail-biting lesions, particularly of severe lesions
(9.7% in our study), the more individual treatments (and associated higher costs) and
the more movements of pigs are necessary. Also, a marked delay in the growth of
pigs and increased mortality may be expected. According to the farm personnel in
the study herd, 60 to 70% of dead pigs had bitten tails.
Implications
- Under the conditions of this study, the incidence of tail-biting lesions
was more than twice as high in barrows as in gilts.
- Severely bitten pigs were significantly smaller than their pen mates.
- Allocation of pigs to pens by gender may help to reduce tail biting.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Jeff Feder, DVM (Swine Vet Clinic, St Peter, Minnesota)
and Bob Baarsch (Next Generation Pork, Spring Valley, Minnesota) for their
help. This study was supported by funds from the Minnesota Pork Producers Association.
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