Abstract
AbstractFear and anxiety are considered concerns for animal welfare as they are associated with negative affective states. This study aimed to pharmacologically validate an attention bias test (ABT) for broiler chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) as a cognitive bias test to determine anxiety. Two-hundred-and-four male Ross 708 broiler chickens were arbitrarily allocated to either the anxiogenic or control treatment at day 25 of age, resulting in 102 birds per treatment. Birds from the anxiogenic group were administered with 2.5 mg/kg of β-CCM (β-carboline-3-carboxylic acid-N-methylamide [FG 7142]) through an intraperitoneal injection at a volume of 0.1 ml/100 g of body weight. Birds from the control group were administered with 9 mg/kg of a saline solution. During ABT, birds were tested in groups of three (n = 34 groups of three birds/treatment) with commercial feed and mealworms as positive stimuli and a conspecific alarm call as a negative stimulus. Control birds were 45 s faster to begin feeding than anxiogenic birds. Birds from the control group vocalized 40 s later and stepped 57 s later than birds from the anxiogenic group. The occurrence of vigilance behaviors did not differ between treatments. This study was successful in pharmacologically validating an attention bias test for fast-growing broiler chickens, testing three birds simultaneously. Our findings showed that latencies to begin feeding, first vocalization, and first step were valid measures to quantify anxiety.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory