The effects of spatial restriction on the behavior of rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
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posted on 2024-03-12, 11:54 authored by Laura M. Dixon, Jessica Hardiman, Jonathan CooperJonathan Cooper<p>Companion rabbits can be housed in a wide variety of accommodations including hutches of smaller dimensions as compared with those that are legally required for laboratory and farmed rabbits. Small rabbit enclosures may restrict behavior patterns including hopping, stretching, and rearing and may compromise rabbit welfare especially when these activities are important to the rabbits. To investigate this possibility, 19 rabbits of different sizes and breeds were housed in small pens equivalent to floor areas of hutches (0.88 m 2), medium pens approximately twice the floor area of conventional hutches (1.68 m 2), and large pens approximately 4 times the floor area of conventional hutches (3.35 m 2). Through scan sampling, 24-hour time budgets of the rabbits were determined and their response to a change in enclosure size was assessed by continuously sampling their behavior for 2 hours after their transfer into different-sized pens. Mixed model analysis using rabbit as the repeated measure found that rabbits were generally more active and interacted more with environmental resources in larger pens compared with smaller pens (P < 0.05). Also, rabbits exhibited a rebound effect in activity and rearing when moved from a smaller sized pen to a larger sized pen (P < 0.05). These findings show that larger pens provide behavioral opportunities that are restricted in smaller pens, and suggest that smaller hutches can jeopardize rabbit welfare. © 2010 Elsevier Inc.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and ResearchVolume
5Issue
6Pages/Article Number
302-308Publisher
Elsevier for Australian Veterinary Behaviour Interest Group and International Working Dog Breeding AssociationExternal DOI
ISSN
1558-7878Date Submitted
2013-07-10Date Accepted
2013-07-10Date of First Publication
2013-07-10Date of Final Publication
2013-07-10ePrints ID
10075Usage metrics
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