Measuring Welfare Flashcards

1
Q

Why should welfare be measured scientifically?

A

Adds objectivity to the debate

Impartial evidence as to the state of welfare in different conditions and environments

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2
Q

What five factors contribute to ones views on animal welfare issues?

A
Economics
Ethical stance
Pyschological factors and life experience 
Politics 
Scientific information
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3
Q

Give two definitions of welfare

A

McGlone 1993 - A poor state of welfare exists only at the point where physiological systems are disturbed and survival or reproduction is impaired
Duncan 1993 - neither health nor lack of stress nor fitness is necessary or sufficient to conclude that an animal has good welfare - welfare is dependant upon what an animal feels

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4
Q

How do consciousness and cognition differ?

A

Cognition - processing/understanding information

Conciousness - feeling emotions

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5
Q

What are the two approaches to measuring welfare?

A
Motiviation and preference testing 
Welfare indicators (behaviour/physical/physiological)
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6
Q

Define suffering or what may cause suffering?

A

“Animlas differ if denied resources they are strongly motivated to obtain or if exposed to stimuli they will work chard to avoid”

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7
Q

What are the problems associated with preference and motivation testing? How have some of these been overcome?

A
  • may show short term preference for something that is damaging in the long term (i.e. proximate v ultimate needs)
    > long term, closed economy studies
  • limited number of alternative choices, dictated by the experimenter
    > use food as a baseline need/reuirement/desire
  • individual animal preferences (experiential and genetic components)
  • difficult to evaluate existing husbandry systems in the long term
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8
Q

What are the assumptions used when looking at welfare indicators?

A
  • biological response of animals in apparently unpleasant situations reflects the degree of suffering they experience
  • anthropomorphic - bio indicators of humans reflect animals in similar states
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9
Q

Outline the process of developing a welfare indicator test

A
  • Situation defined as unpleasant (BY US)
  • Animal exposed to this
  • Biological response measured
  • Consistent réponse to a number of unpleasant situations taken as indictors of poor welfare and suffering
  • indicators used to assess the impact of a new situation on welfare and suffering
  • situation defined as unpleasant!
    > Bit of a vicious cycle
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10
Q

Which three points should be considered when using welfare indicators?

A
  • Measurements should be non-invasive so as not to stress the animals
  • Indicators should be appropriate to the situation eg. long/short term
  • knowledge of the function of the indicator will aid interpretation eg. cortisol/cortisone may be released in + encounters (eg. sex) as well well as -, and there are stressful situations (eg. heat stress) where cortisol is not released
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11
Q

What is the optimum way to measure welfare? Give an example where this has been used

A

Combine welfare indicators with motivate/preference testing
- Welfare of fur farmed mink
> 8 resources offered
> measures of desire include
= ELASTICITY of demand for resources (does demand v as price^)
= max COST paid per resource in kg
= TOTAL EXPENDITURE (no. of times accessed * price)
- top three resources denied for 24 hours
- urinary cortisol measured -> was high

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12
Q

What are the problems still remaining with preference testing?

A
  • experience of the resource may be necessary before it becomes valuable
  • deprivation may only be stressful in the short term
  • other resources may be more valued in the presence/abscence of others eg. if ball and swimming pool are offered may both appear to be less valued whereas if only one play related option present may be highly valued
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