Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production

On organic and free-range poultry farms, a free-range is provided for animal welfare reasons. However, farmers report sightings of birds of prey and sometimes foxes or other predators within the free-range areas. In addition to seeing actual attacks, they also find chicken carcasses in the free-rang...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animals
Main Authors: Monique Bestman, Judith Bikker-Ouwejan
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020
Subjects:
Hen
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-2615/10/2/177/ 2023-08-20T03:59:03+02:00 Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production Monique Bestman Judith Bikker-Ouwejan agris 2020-01-21 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Poultry https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Animals; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 177 predation mortality free-range laying hens organic laying hens Text 2020 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177 2023-07-31T23:01:33Z On organic and free-range poultry farms, a free-range is provided for animal welfare reasons. However, farmers report sightings of birds of prey and sometimes foxes or other predators within the free-range areas. In addition to seeing actual attacks, they also find chicken carcasses in the free-range, the deaths of which they attribute to predators. In addition, and in contrast to indoor poultry farmers, organic/free-range farmers report hundreds of chickens missing, per flock, when comparing the slaughterhouse arrival numbers with farm mortality records. The farmers assume these missing animals are hens that vanished from the free-range area and that predation is the major cause for their disappearance. If so, predation may impact farm yields. This study investigated whether birds of prey kill chickens on organic/free-range egg production farms and the impact, in terms of numbers of chickens and yield losses. This study was to provide qualitative and quantitative information in support of chicken mortality caused by birds of prey. Data were collected through field observations on organic/free-range farms (n = 11) and an online survey among organic/free-range farmers. Seventy-nine field observations on 11 farms resulted in 141 sightings of birds of prey, mostly common buzzards (Buteo buteo) and northern goshawks (Accipiter gentilis). Forty-four dead hens were found, 36 of them were very likely killed by either birds of prey or foxes. Sixteen attacks on hens by goshawk or buzzard were seen. There were no reasons to assume the attacked hens were in a poor condition prior to the attack. From responses to the online survey (n = 27 farms experiencing predation), it was estimated that on average 3.7% of hens of organic/free-range flocks were killed by predators, while total mortality was 12.2%. After calculating missed yield per killed hen, it was roughly estimated that per flock, predation caused yield losses of EUR 5700 on an average organic farm (size 12,700 hens) and EUR 6700 on an average free-range farm (size ... Text Accipiter gentilis MDPI Open Access Publishing Hen ENVELOPE(-55.748,-55.748,52.983,52.983) Animals 10 2 177
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic predation
mortality
free-range laying hens
organic laying hens
spellingShingle predation
mortality
free-range laying hens
organic laying hens
Monique Bestman
Judith Bikker-Ouwejan
Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
topic_facet predation
mortality
free-range laying hens
organic laying hens
description On organic and free-range poultry farms, a free-range is provided for animal welfare reasons. However, farmers report sightings of birds of prey and sometimes foxes or other predators within the free-range areas. In addition to seeing actual attacks, they also find chicken carcasses in the free-range, the deaths of which they attribute to predators. In addition, and in contrast to indoor poultry farmers, organic/free-range farmers report hundreds of chickens missing, per flock, when comparing the slaughterhouse arrival numbers with farm mortality records. The farmers assume these missing animals are hens that vanished from the free-range area and that predation is the major cause for their disappearance. If so, predation may impact farm yields. This study investigated whether birds of prey kill chickens on organic/free-range egg production farms and the impact, in terms of numbers of chickens and yield losses. This study was to provide qualitative and quantitative information in support of chicken mortality caused by birds of prey. Data were collected through field observations on organic/free-range farms (n = 11) and an online survey among organic/free-range farmers. Seventy-nine field observations on 11 farms resulted in 141 sightings of birds of prey, mostly common buzzards (Buteo buteo) and northern goshawks (Accipiter gentilis). Forty-four dead hens were found, 36 of them were very likely killed by either birds of prey or foxes. Sixteen attacks on hens by goshawk or buzzard were seen. There were no reasons to assume the attacked hens were in a poor condition prior to the attack. From responses to the online survey (n = 27 farms experiencing predation), it was estimated that on average 3.7% of hens of organic/free-range flocks were killed by predators, while total mortality was 12.2%. After calculating missed yield per killed hen, it was roughly estimated that per flock, predation caused yield losses of EUR 5700 on an average organic farm (size 12,700 hens) and EUR 6700 on an average free-range farm (size ...
format Text
author Monique Bestman
Judith Bikker-Ouwejan
author_facet Monique Bestman
Judith Bikker-Ouwejan
author_sort Monique Bestman
title Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
title_short Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
title_full Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
title_fullStr Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
title_full_unstemmed Predation in Organic and Free-Range Egg Production
title_sort predation in organic and free-range egg production
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.748,-55.748,52.983,52.983)
geographic Hen
geographic_facet Hen
genre Accipiter gentilis
genre_facet Accipiter gentilis
op_source Animals; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 177
op_relation Poultry
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10020177
container_title Animals
container_volume 10
container_issue 2
container_start_page 177
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