Scientific Reports (Nov 2023)

Amino acid supplementation counteracts negative effects of low protein diets on tail biting in pigs more than extra environmental enrichment

  • Ilaria Minussi,
  • Walter J. J. Gerrits,
  • Alfons J. M. Jansman,
  • Rosemarijn Gerritsen,
  • William Lambert,
  • Johan J. Zonderland,
  • J. Elizabeth Bolhuis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-45704-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Low protein (LP) diets may increase the occurrence of damaging behaviours, like tail biting, in pigs. We investigated the effect of supplementing a LP diet with indispensable amino acids (IAA) or environmental enrichment on tail biting. Undocked pigs (n = 48 groups of 12) received either a normal protein diet (NP), a LP, LP with supplemented IAA (LP+), or LP diet with extra environmental enrichment (LP-E+) during the starter, grower, and finisher phase. Performance, activity, behaviour, and body damage were recorded. LP and LP-E+ had a lower feed intake, growth, and gain-to-feed ratio, and were more active than NP and LP+ pigs. LP-E+ pigs interacted most often with enrichment materials, followed by LP, LP+, and NP pigs. LP pigs showed more tail biting than all other groups during the starter phase and the finisher phase (tendency) compared to NP and LP+ pigs. Thus, LP-E+ only reduced tail biting in the starter phase, whereas LP+ tended to do so throughout. Tail damage was more severe in LP pigs than in NP and LP+, with LP-E+ in between. In conclusion, IAA supplementation was more effective than extra environmental enrichment in countering the negative effects of a low protein diet on tail biting in pigs.