Using environmental enrichment to reduce the expression of abnormal behaviours in Greater rhea Rhea americana at Belo Horizonte Zoo.
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Data
2012
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Resumo
Animals kept by zoos may express abnormal behaviours
that are indicators of poor welfare. Environmental
enrichment is a technique of providing items to animals
that stimulate the expression of normal behaviours. The
aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of providing
simple environmental enrichment in the reduction of the
expression of abnormal behaviour in captive-born
Greater rhea Rhea americana at Belo Horizonte Zoo,
south-eastern Brazil. As enrichment, fruit and vegetables
were scatter fed to a group of seven birds from April to
September 2009, and the behaviour of the birds was
recorded using scan sampling with instantaneous recording
of behaviour every 1 minute for 1 hour daily (90
hours of observation). The study was divided into three
phases: baseline, enrichment and post-enrichment.
The abnormal behaviours ‘pacing’, ‘eating faeces’ and
‘escaping behaviour’ reduced during the enrichment
phase, but only the first two behaviours differed significantly
between the phases; ‘walking’ and ‘foraging’,
both positive behaviours, increased during the enrichment
phase. These results showed that the implementation
of simple environmental enrichment can stimulate
the Greater rhea to exhibit more natural behaviours and
improve their welfare.
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Abnormal behaviours, Animal welfare, Conservation, Environmental enrichment
Citação
AZEVEDO, C. S. de et al. Using environmental enrichment to reduce the expression of abnormal behaviours in Greater rhea Rhea americana at Belo Horizonte Zoo. International Zoo Yearbook, v. 47, p. 163-170, 2012. Disponível em: <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1748-1090.2012.00195.x/abstract>. Acesso em: 20 de jul. 2017.