A professor of agriculture with Newcastle University suggests by engaging in dialogue and showing good faith the Canadian swine industry should be able to maintain the trust of its customers.
While not everyone agrees on what animals require for good welfare, scientists have summarized good animal welfare into four categories, good feeding, good housing, good health and appropriate behavior.
Dr. Sandra Edwards, a professor of agriculture with Newcastle University, told those on hand yesterday for the 2015 Manitoba Swine Seminar most people who work with swine have as their basic motivation an ethical sense of responsibility for their animals but equally important, we know there are very strong links between good production and profitability.
We know how important good health of animals is for their productivity.
However welfare is more than just good health.
We know that when animals are put in situations of challenge either from a less than ideal environment or from a difficult social situation with aggression then they will respond to that situation by changes in their physiology and the increased level of stress hormones that go with those changes impacts almost every aspect of production.
It will reduce their feed intake, reduce their growth rate, give you poorer feed efficiency, give you poorer reproduction and it can compromise their ability to mount immune responses so if there are diseases going around and challenges there pigs with poor welfare are more likely to succumb to them.
Dr. Edwards suggests both farmers and consumers fundamentally want good animal welfare.
She says they may have slightly different ideas of what that means and suggests if scientists can demonstrate, from the pig’s point of view, what good welfare is it will be possible for people on both sides of the debate to reach a consensus.