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Are caged chickens miserable?

2009-11-19 12:00

kalahari.net

Des Moines - Are cramped chickens crazy chickens?

Researchers are trying to answer that question through several studies that intend to take emotions out of an angry debate between animal welfare groups and producers.

At issue are small cages, typically 61cm wide by 65cm deep, that can be shared by up to nine hens.

About 96% of eggs sold in the United States come from hens who live in the so-called battery cages from the day they're born until their egg-laying days end 18 to 24 months later.

Public opinion appears to side with those who oppose the cages. Voters in California approved a proposition last year that bans cramped cages for hens.

And Michigan's governor signed legislation last month requiring confined animals to have enough room to turn around and fully extend their limbs.

Decisions based on science

Peter Skewes, a Clemson University researcher, is leading one of the studies comparing how different housing affects egg-laying hens. He said there are plenty of "emotional" opinions about whether the cages are inhumane, but few are based on facts.

"Hopefully we will contribute something so decisions can be made based on science and knowledge about how we house birds and the implications for different systems," said Skewes, who is in the early stages of a three-year study funded by the US Department of Agriculture.

But even as Skewes and others conduct research, some question the need to study an issue they argue was resolved long ago.

Bruce Friedrich, a spokesperson for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, said banning the cages is a solution to an obvious problem.

"Think about the ... effects of not moving for up to 24 months," Friedrich said. "Their bones and muscles waste away and they go insane."

'Misleading people'

Paul Shapiro, senior director of the Humane Society of the United States' Factory Farming Campaign, agreed.

"The egg industry is trying to muddy the waters by misleading people into believing that it's possible to confine birds in barren, tiny cages and have high welfare," he said.

Producers see it differently, claiming caged hens are healthier and satisfied with the only lives they've ever known. Although the chickens can't fully extend their wings, producers contend they're not stuffed so tightly that they can't move around the cage.

"Is this animal cruelty? This absolutely is not," said Bob Krouse, an egg producer based in Mentone, Indiana, and president of the United Egg Producers industry group.

Or as KY Hendrix, owner of Rose Acres Farms in Seymour, Indiana, puts it, "We can produce a better egg, produce a healthier chicken if we keep them inside".

Producers began experimenting with hen cages in the late 1950s. By the early 1970s, cages were commonly used for egg-laying hens and are now the standard home for hens, which can lay up to 300 eggs a year.

Hens lay eggs for up to two years, then typically are used as meat for humans or animal feed.

Behavioural patterns

Whether they're a delaying tactic - as animal welfare groups claim - or needed research, studies on chicken cages are proceeding.

Skewes will compare emotional and behavioural patterns of caged hens with non-caged counterparts. Part of that will including studying behaviours such as wing-stretching, perching and foraging.

"We're looking at what ... things they would still do if given the opportunity," Skewes said. "So you deprive them of that, and the welfare component is, so what? There are difficult questions."

Another study, coordinated by the University of California at Davis and Michigan State University, weighs several issues involving caged chickens, including their welfare and impact on the environment and human health as well as food quality and safety.

The study, funded by the American Egg Board, also considers the economics of egg production. In California, producers estimated the voter-backed rules would add about a penny to the cost of each egg, but Krouse put the cost at up to 50 cents per dozen eggs.

"We hope we can say ... what the effect is going to be on prices, the environment and on the welfare of hens," said Joy Mench, a UC Davis researcher. 

'We're looking for the best solution'

UC Davis and Michigan State also plan another study that will include several advisers, including food companies such as McDonald's and Cargill Inc, the Department of Agriculture's Research Service, and groups such as the American Veterinary Medical Association and the Centre for Food Integrity.

Mench said that study will examine egg production sustainability, hen welfare, worker safety, food safety and food quality.

Dr Gail Golab, director of the veterinary association's Animal Welfare Division, said she hopes the studies can clarify the debate.

"A number of us that work in the animal welfare field are frustrated at efforts to say one system is all good or all bad and not being able to quantify welfare values," Golab said. "(We want to) look for the best possible solution we can for raising these animals."

- AP

Read more on:    chickens  |  animals  |  science


John 11/19/2009 12:11:42 PM
If PETA is so sure about their case, why don't they want an objective investigation according to the scientific method?

jka 11/19/2009 12:47:07 PM
Who is funding this research? if it is battery farms or a representative body thereof I would not be surprised!

By all means, have a scientific study - it will just show exactly what vegans have known for years - and what thousands of youtube clips and other media show - that factory farmed animals suffer from painful sores, psychological/behavioural problems and physiological weaknesses.

Humans are not of some special separate order to the rest of the environment - once we make this connection we will start to live sustainably and without inflicting unnecessary (we do not need meat, as vegans around the world prove, and as the American Dietetic Association now acknowledges)cruelty and harm.

Puhleez 11/19/2009 12:53:49 PM
The article does not mention the millions of male chicks that, every day, are ripped off an assembly line of fluffy yellow babies, flung into vucuum, sucked down a tube and then fed into a grinder - alive. Just because a male chick can not lay eggs and battery farmers can not force a hen to lay eggs that are only female. What goes around WILL come around to the human race.

Humpty 11/19/2009 1:22:32 PM
I keep chickens and can assure you that they live for more than 7 years, have complex interactions, love foraging, having sandbaths, preening and exploring. This is their true nature and birthright.

Carni 11/19/2009 1:42:08 PM
I don't agree with battery chickens, or feedlots for other animals, but to say we should not eat meat is twaddle. The lunatic fringe of PETA and the vegans would have millions of animals slaughtered because we will not need them any more. JKA - are you going to step up to kill them?. Vegetables are what real food eats!!!

me 11/19/2009 2:37:12 PM
keeping chickens in battery cages is obviously cruel. no studies needed to prove it.
The whole factory farming industry is horrendously cruel.
seems people care only about money. Its likely that all the American Egg Board and its members care about is profit.
we are building up some heavy karma for ourselves.

@Carni 11/19/2009 3:05:54 PM
would you step up to kill the animals that you eat, and look at them every day in their battery cages or steel pens? would you still be hungry for meat?

A Royal Cluck-Up 11/20/2009 2:01:20 AM
honestly, are we really arguing about chickens? if you think their living conditions are bad i urge you to visit a non-profit AIDS haven, why can't the research grant be used to improve living conditions for the sick and elderly (humans)?

pms 12/11/2009 6:51:15 PM
john talks about scientific method. certain questions are amenable to this method, others less so. How 'happy' is a chicken, is not. One would have to study stress hormone levels or perhaps some behavioral assay, but questions about emotion are notoriously hard to study through the scientific method. I am a professional Ph.D., researcher in science. However, all groups should promote objective studies. Finally, some things are just so obvious as to be uninteresting to study: i believe this is one such issue. Penning animals in such cages in such densities in such conditions... you don't need science to address that one. Just think AND feel.

royal cluck 12/11/2009 7:04:13 PM
to royal cluck-up. why must we parse empathy? can't we find enough empathy (and funding!) within us to help humans and non-humans alike?

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