Pre-Slaughter Welfare Flashcards
Common causes of dead on arrival
- pigs hyperthermia, metabolic acidosis
- sheep smothering and ill health
- chicken trauma (haemorrhage and air sac damage) and congestive heart failure
How can antemortem and postmortem trauma be distingushed?
Haemorrhage antemortem
Causes of fatal trauma in poultry
- dislocated hips
- liver rupture
- head trauma
- intra peritoneal haemorrhage (not liver)
% carcasse bruising
- cattle 1.67%
- sheep 0.14%
- pigs 1.48%
Stocking density of trailers
Sufficient to support each other
- not too tight to cause tramping and hyperthermia
Causes of back bruising in cattle
- other cattle mounting
- reestablishing hierachy when new groups mixed market etc
Causes red wing tips
- can be pre slaughter
- common at slaughter and stunning (tonic clonic contraction post mortem)
- not necessarily welfare issue
Why may moving crates of birds around at rough angles be bad?
- bruising
- contamination carcasses
What is required legally in slaughter houses ?
- alternative slaughter lines
- though may take few hours to start up (need to clear back log of birds outside factory)
- can succumb to hyperthermia if left sitting - may need trucks to drive around
Which birds are at ^ risk broken bones ?
- hens (cf. Broilers)
- osteoporosis d/t age, calcium in diet, light intensity and changes -> trauma
Is leather profitable?
- more profitable than meat!
> most skilled knife person on skinning line not slaughter (bad for welfare!)
What is metabolic exhaustion?
- lactic acid build up v pH -> > darker meat (dark firm dry, dark cut of beef) - if pH drops at a slower rate - indicates stress before slaughter (dehydration, over stocking, long transport etc.) - glycogen stores used up > pale soft exudative - stress at slaughter - rapid decline in pH - common pigs
How can you avoid high pH meat?
- minimise stress
- allow recovery muscle glycogen
- improve glycogen storage (not used much)
effects of dehydration - welfare and meat
- thirst, headache
- difficult skin removal
- sticky meat
- darker, tougher meat
- smaller loin muscle area (shrinkage)
Most common live export from uk?
- DIC layers (within 48hrs, still surviving on energy from yolk so no need to feed - problems when delayed flights have to be slaughetered as cannot return into country)
- Heathrow -> all round world