Login / Signup

Pelt Biting as a Practical Indicator of Social and Environment Stress in Farmed Red Deer.

Francisco Javier Pérez-BarberíaAndrés José GarcíaMaría López-QuintanillaTomás Landete-Castillejos
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2021)
Agonistic behavioural interactions play a decisive role in the competition for food, space, mating opportunities, and establishing social rank. We used pelt biting (number of bites on an animal's body) as a proxy for assessing the intensity of agonistic animal interactions and how it responded to social, population, and heat stress factors. We modelled a 14-year time series of pelt biting records and observational data of agonistic interactions on a population of captive Iberian red deer (Cervus elaphus). We found that (i) the higher the social rank of deer, the lower the number of pelt bites received; (ii) increasing heat stress conditions caused deer to suffer more pelt bites; (iii) males received more bites than females; (iv) the heavier the deer, the lower the number of bites on their bodies; (v) the bigger the group, the more bites exhibited on its members; (vi) deer 5-6 years old suffered greater rate of pelt biting than younger or older deer; and (vii) hinds that gave birth earlier in the parturition period suffered less pelt biting than those that gave birth around the peak of the parturition season (p < 0.01 for all effects). Pelt biting is useful to predict management situations in which deer welfare could be at stake.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • heat shock
  • high intensity
  • electronic health record
  • cross sectional
  • deep learning
  • climate change