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Exploratory Survey on European Consumer and Stakeholder Attitudes towards Alternatives for Surgical Castration of Piglets

Authors :
Marijke Aluwé
Evert Heyrman
João M. Almeida
Jakub Babol
Gianni Battacone
Jaroslav Čítek
Maria Font i Furnols
Andriy Getya
Danijel Karolyi
Eliza Kostyra
Kevin Kress
Goran Kušec
Daniel Mörlein
Anastasia Semenova
Martin Škrlep
Todor Stoyanchev
Igor Tomašević
Liliana Tudoreanu
Maren Van Son
Sylwia Żakowska-Biemans
Galia Zamaratskaia
Alice Van den Broeke
Macarena Egea
Source :
Animals, Vol 10, Iss 10, p 1758 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Surgical castration of piglets without pain relief is still common practice in many countries. Possible alternatives for surgical castration are application of pain relief or anaesthesia or production of boars (entire males) and immunocastrates. Each of these alternatives faces advantages and disadvantages which may result in different citizen attitudes and consumers acceptability. Understanding which practice is acceptable to whom and why may further stimulate implementation. Consumer (n = 3251) and stakeholder (n = 1027) attitudes towards surgical castration without pain relief, surgical castration with anaesthesia, immunocastration, and production of boars were surveyed from April to June 2020 via an online questionnaire in 16 countries (>175 respondents per country). Surgical castration without pain relief was separated from each of the alternatives due to animal welfare and showed the lowest acceptability (32%). Within the alternatives, a further partitioning between the alternatives was based on perceived quality and food safety, with an acceptance of 85% for applying anaesthesia, 71% for immunocastration, and 49% for boar production. Differences depending on professional involvement and familiarity with agriculture could be observed, mainly for the acceptance of surgical castration without anaesthesia, immunocastration, and boars. Castration with anaesthesia was highly accepted by all types of respondents.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762615
Volume :
10
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Animals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.296f9f6b8050498f9d9cba7541d604bc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10101758