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Battery cage

Battery cages are a housing system used for various animal production methods, but primarily for egg-laying hens. The name arises from the arrangement of rows and columns of identical cages connected, in a unit, as in an artillery battery. Although the term is usually applied to poultry farming, similar cage systems are used for other animals. Battery cages have generated controversy between advocates for animal welfare and industrial producers.

Chickens in multiple-occupancy battery cages

Battery cages in practice edit

Robotic cages are the predominant form of housing for laying hens worldwide.[1][2][3] They reduce aggression and cannibalism among hens, but are barren, restrict movement, prevent many natural behaviours, and increase rates of osteoporosis.[3] As of 2014, approximately 95 percent of eggs in the United States were produced in battery cages.[4] In the United Kingdom, statistics from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) indicate that 50% of eggs produced in the UK throughout 2010 were from cages (45% from free-range, 5% from barns).[5]

The EU ban on battery-caged hens edit

The Council of the European Union Directive 1999/74/EC[6] banned conventional battery cages in the EU starting in January 2012 for welfare reasons, leading to a significant decrease in the number of eggs from battery cages in the EU.[7][8] The 2012 battery cage ban was publicised as heralding an end to caged hens throughout Europe, but it created a widely held misconception that all laying hens in the UK are now either free-range or barn birds. That is not the case; although battery cages are illegal, farmers have skirted the ban by providing slightly bigger cages with "enrichment" such as perches. The hens in these conditions are now called "ex-cage colony hens".[9]

Other examples of caged animals edit

Battery cages are also used for mink, rabbit, chinchilla and fox in fur farming, and most recently for the Asian palm civet for kopi luwak production of coffee.

History edit

 
A chicken coop from the 1950s

An early reference to battery cages appears in Milton Arndt's 1931 book, Battery Brooding, where he reports that his cage flock was healthier and had higher egg production than his conventional flock.[10] At this early date, battery cages already had the sloped floor that allowed eggs to roll to the front of the cage, where they were easily collected by the farmer and out of the hens' reach. Arndt also mentions the use of conveyor belts under the cages to remove manure, which provides better air control quality and reduces fly breeding.[10]

Original battery cages extended the technology used in battery brooders, which were cages with a wire mesh floor and integral heating elements for brooding chicks. The wire floor allowed the manure to pass through, removing it from the chicks' environment and reducing the risk of manure-borne diseases.[citation needed]

Early battery cages were often used for selecting hens based on performance since it is easy to track how many eggs each hen is laying if only one hen is placed in a cage. Later, this was combined with artificial insemination, giving a technique where each egg's parentage is known. This method is still used today.[citation needed]

Video advertising the system in the early history of the battery cage

Early reports from Arndt about battery cages were enthusiastic. Arndt reported:

This form of battery is coming into widespread use throughout the country and apparently is solving a number of the troubles encountered with laying hens in the regular laying house on the floor.

In the first edition of this book I spoke of my experimental work with 220 pullets which were retained for one year in individual cages. At the end of this year, it was found that the birds confined in the batteries outlaid considerably the same size flock in the regular houses. The birds consume less feed than those on the floor and this coupled with the increased production made them more profitable than the same number of pullets in the laying house.[10]

A number of progressive poultrymen from all over the United States and some in foreign countries cooperated with me in carrying on experimental work with this type of battery and each and every one of them were very well satisfied with the results obtained. In fact, a number of them have since placed their entire laying flocks in individual hen batteries.[10]

In 1967, Samuel Duff filed a patent for "battery cages" in patent US3465722.[11]

The use of laying batteries increased gradually, becoming the dominant method somewhat before the integration of the egg industry in the 1960s. The practice of battery cages was criticized in Ruth Harrison's landmark book Animal Machines, published in 1964.[12]

 
A simple battery cage system with no conveyors for feed or eggs

In 1990, North and Bell reported that 75 percent of all commercial layers in the world and 95 percent in the United States were kept in cages.[13]

By all accounts, a caged layer facility is more expensive to build than high-density floor confinement but can be cheaper to operate if designed to minimize labor.

North and Bell report the following economic advantages to laying cages:

  1. It is easier to care for the pullets; no birds are underfoot
  2. Floor eggs are eliminated
  3. Eggs are cleaner
  4. Culling is expedited
  5. In most instances, less feed is required to produce a dozen eggs
  6. Broodiness is eliminated
  7. More pullets may be housed in a given house floor space
  8. Internal parasites are eliminated
  9. Labor requirements are generally much reduced[13]

They also cite disadvantages to cages:

  1. The handling of manure may be a problem
  2. Generally, flies become a greater nuisance
  3. The investment per pullet may be higher than in the case of floor operations
  4. There is a slightly higher percentage of blood spots in the eggs
  5. The bones are more fragile and processors often discount the fowl price[13]

Disadvantages one and two can be eliminated by manure conveyors, but some industrial systems do not feature manure conveyors.[14]

Legislation edit

 
  
Nationwide ban on battery cages
  
Some subnational bans on battery cages
  
Nationwide phaseout of battery cages in progress
  
Battery cages legal
  
No data

Efforts are being undertaken to prohibit battery cages in countries around the world, including Bhutan, India, Brazil, Costa Rica, and Mexico.[15]

Australia edit

Attempts to change the law have been an object of contention; RSPCA Australia has been officially campaigning to abolish both battery cages and furnished cages and to prohibit the sale of cage eggs ever since the 2001 revision of the Poultry Code.[16] The 2009 Code of Practice permits the use of battery cages. A written commitment by the Federal government to review the practice was scheduled in 2010; there was no further communication. During 2013 the state government of Tasmania was planning to phase out battery cages and budgeting for financial compensation for affected farmers but this was scrapped following the 2014 election.[17][18]

The Australian Capital Territory prohibited battery cages in early 2014.[19] The Greens were committed to also legally prohibit them in late 2014 in Victoria.[19] In 2019, New South Wales Legislative Council member Emma Hurst established and chaired a NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into the Use of Battery Cages for Hens in the Egg Production Industry.[20] The Inquiry recommended that all food products containing eggs from caged hens should be clearly labelled for the benefit of consumers, and a phase-out of battery cage hen farming in NSW.[21][22]

Bhutan edit

Bhutan outlawed battery cages in 2012.[15]

Canada edit

In February 2016, 90 percent of egg-laying hens in Canada lived in battery cages. That month, negotiations between egg farmers, animal welfarists, and the government resulted in a moratorium on construction of new battery cages from 1 April 2017 and a gradual 15-year phaseout of battery cages towards enriched cage or cage-free systems by 2036.[23] Activist group Mercy for Animals was pleased with the announced phaseout, but called the timetable "simply outrageous" and argued that more urgency was required; some food companies such as Cara Foods, Tim Hortons, Burger King, McDonald's, Wendy's, Starbucks, and Subway restaurant announced they would phaseout non-cage-free eggs much sooner than 2036.[23]

European Union edit

In 1999, the Council of the European Union Directive 1999/74/EC[6] banned the conventional battery cage in the EU in 2012, after a 12-year phase-out. In their 1996 report, the European Commission's Scientific Veterinary Committee (SVC) condemned the battery cage, concluding:

It is clear that because of its small size and its barrenness, the battery cage as used at present has inherent severe disadvantages for the welfare of hens.

The EU Directive allows "enriched" or "furnished" cages to be used. Under the directive, enriched cages must be at least 45 centimetres (18 inches) high and must provide each hen with at least 750 square centimetres (116 square inches) of space; 600 square centimetres (93 sq in) of this must be "usable area" – the other 150 square centimetres (23 sq in) is for a nest-box. The cage must also contain litter, perches, and "claw-shortening devices". Some animal welfare organisations, such as Compassion in World Farming, have criticised this move, calling for enriched cages to be prohibited as they believe they provide no significant or worthwhile welfare benefits compared with conventional battery cages.

Germany banned conventional battery cages in 2007, five years earlier than required by the EU Directive,[24] and has prohibited enriched cages from 2012.[25] Mahi Klosterhalfen of the Albert Schweitzer Foundation has been instrumental in a strategic campaign against battery cages in Germany.[26]

India edit

In 2013, the Animal Welfare Board of India concluded that battery cages were in violation of Section 11 (1)(e) of the 1960 Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, and issued an advisory to all state governments stating that battery cages should not be used and existing ones should be phased out by 2017.[27] This interpretation has been followed by several states[15] and confirmed by several courts such as the Punjab and Haryana High Court (March 2014)[27] and the Delhi High Court.[28] Yet, some battery cages have been found to continue operating illegally after 1 January 2017.[29]

New Zealand edit

On 7 December 2012, as part of a new welfare code for the poultry industry, the New Zealand government implemented a ban on the construction of new battery cages and initiated a ten-year phase-out of all battery cages in the country by 2022. As an intermediate goal, 45 percent of battery cages were to be removed by 2018.[30]

Norway edit

In April 2010, the Norwegian grocery chain REMA 1000 decided to stop selling eggs from both battery and furnished cage hens by the year 2012, to coincide with the scheduled EU-wide prohibition on battery cages.[31] Norwegian law followed EU legislation and on 1 January 2012 also prohibited battery cages (known as tradisjonelle bur or "traditional cages" in Norwegian), making furnished cages (known as miljøbur or "environmental cages" in Norwegian) the minimum legal requirement.[32][33] Several more industry groups have decided to voluntarily phase out furnished cages as well, such as NorgesGruppen by 2019[34] and Nortura by 2024,[32] while in April 2017 the Green Party proposed to ban furnished cages throughout the country by 2025.[34]

Switzerland edit

Switzerland banned battery cages from 1 January 1992; it was the first country to impose such a ban.[35][36]

United States edit

 
US States with bans on battery cages for laying hens
  Laws prohibiting battery cages
  Laws prohibiting battery cages and cage-egg sale
  Battery cages legal

As of March 2020, California, Massachusetts, Washington, Michigan, Ohio, and Rhode Island had passed laws banning the use of battery cages, and the former three additionally banned the sale of eggs produced in battery cages.[37] Michigan's ban of battery cages and the sale of non-cage-free eggs in the state, adopted in November 2019, will enter into force at the end of 2024.[38]

The passage of California Proposition 2 in 2008 aimed, in part, to reduce or eliminate the problems associated with battery cages, by setting the standard for space relative to free movement and wingspan, rather than cage size.

Battery cages are illegal in Michigan due to HB 5127, passed in 2009, which mandates that certain farm animals have enough room to stand up, lie down, turn around, and extend their limbs, rather than being confined in tiny cages.[39]

In Ohio, there is a moratorium on permits for the construction of new battery cages as of June 2010.[40]

Oregon SB 805 also banned battery cages and set forth a transition to enriched colony cages, doubling the space per egg-laying hen.[41][42] This law served as the model for a national agreement between the Humane Society of the United States and the United Egg Producers.[43]

Welfare concerns edit

There are several welfare concerns regarding the battery cage system of housing and husbandry. These are presented below in the approximate chronological order they would influence the hens.

Chick culling edit

Due to modern selective breeding, laying hen strains are different from those of meat production strains. Male birds of the laying strains do not lay eggs and are unsuitable for meat production, therefore, they are culled soon after being sexed, often on the day of hatching.[44] Methods of culling include cervical dislocation, asphyxiation by carbon dioxide and maceration using a high speed grinder.

Animal rights groups have used videos of live chicks being placed into macerators as evidence of cruelty in the egg production industry.[45] Maceration, together with cervical dislocation and asphyxiation by carbon dioxide, are all considered acceptable methods of euthanasia by the American Veterinary Medical Association.[46][47] Consumers may also be appalled simply by the death of animals that are not subsequently eaten.[48]

Beak-trimming edit

To reduce the harmful effects of feather pecking, cannibalism and vent pecking, most chicks eventually going into battery cages are beak-trimmed. This is often performed on the first day after hatching, simultaneously with sexing and receiving vaccinations. Beak-trimming is a procedure considered by many scientists to cause acute pain and distress with possible chronic pain; it is practised on chicks for all types of housing systems, not only battery cages.[49]

Cage size edit

 
Battery cage

At approximately 16 weeks of age, pullets (hens which have not yet started to lay) are placed into cages. In countries with relevant legislation, floor space for battery cages ranges upwards from 300 square centimetres (47 sq in) per bird. EU standards in 2003 called for at least 550 square centimetres (85 sq in) per hen.[50] In the US, the current recommendation by the United Egg Producers is 67–86 square inches (430–550 square centimetres) per bird.[51] The space available to each hen in a battery cage has often been described as less than the size of a sheet of A4 paper (624 square centimetres (96.7 sq in)).[52] Other people have commented that a typical cage is about the size of a filing cabinet drawer and holds eight to ten hens.[14][53]

Behavioural studies showed that when turning, hens used 540–1,006 square centimetres (83.7–155.9 sq in), when stretching wings 653–1,118 square centimetres (101.2–173.3 sq in), when wing flapping 860–1,980 square centimetres (133–307 sq in), when feather ruffling 676–1,604 square centimetres (104.8–248.6 sq in), when preening 814–1,240 square centimetres (126.2–192.2 sq in), and when ground scratching 540 to 1005 cm2.[54] A space allowance of 550 square centimetres (85 sq in) would prevent hens in battery cages from performing these behaviours without touching another hen. Animal welfare scientists have been critical of battery cages because of these space restrictions[55] and it is widely considered that hens suffer boredom and frustration when unable to perform these behaviours.[56] Spatial restriction can lead to a wide range of abnormal behaviours, some of which are injurious to the hens or their cagemates.

Light manipulation edit

 
Battery cages – note the low light intensity beyond range of the camera flashgun

To reduce the harmful effects of feather pecking, cannibalism and vent-pecking, hens in battery cages (and other housing systems) are often kept at low light intensities (e.g. less than ten lux). Low light intensities may be associated with welfare costs to the hens as they prefer to eat in brightly lit environments[57] and prefer brightly lit areas for active behaviour but dim (less than ten lux) for inactive behaviour.[58] Dimming the lights can also cause problems when the intensity is then abruptly increased temporarily to inspect the hens; this has been associated as a risk factor of increased feather pecking[59] and the birds can become frightened resulting in panic-type ("hysteria") reactions which can increase the risk of injury.

Being indoors, hens in battery cages do not see sunlight. Whilst there is no scientific evidence for this being a welfare problem, some animal advocates indicate it is a concern.[60] Furnished cages and some other non-cage indoor systems would also prevent hens seeing natural light throughout their lives.

Osteoporosis edit

Several studies have indicated that toward the end of the laying phase (approximately 72 weeks of age), a combination of high calcium demand for egg production and a lack of exercise can lead to osteoporosis. This can occur in all housing systems for egg laying hens, but is particularly prevalent in battery cage systems where it has sometimes been called 'cage layer osteoporosis'.[61] Osteoporosis leads to the skeleton becoming fragile and an increased risk of bone breakage, particularly in the legs and keel bone. Fractures may occur whilst the hens are in the cage and these are usually discovered at depopulation as old, healed breaks, or they might be fresh breaks which occurred during the process of depopulation. One study showed that 24.6 percent of hens from battery cages had recent keel fractures whereas hens in furnished cages, barn and free range had 3.6 percent, 1.2 percent and 1.3 percent respectively. However, hens from battery cages experienced fewer old breaks (17.7%) compared to hens in barn (69.1%), free-range (59.8%) and furnished cages (31.7%).[49]

Forced moulting edit

Flocks are sometimes force moulted, rather than being slaughtered, to reinvigorate egg-laying. This involves complete withdrawal of food (and sometimes water) for seven to fourteen days[62] or sufficiently long to cause a body weight loss of 25 to 35 percent.[63] This stimulates the hen to lose her feathers, but also reinvigorates egg-production. Some flocks may be force moulted several times. In 2003, more than 75 percent of all flocks were moulted in the US.[64] This temporary starving of the hens is seen as inhumane and is the main point of objection by critics and opponents of the practice. The alternative most often employed is to slaughter the hens instead of moulting them.[citation needed]

Improving welfare for egg-producing hens edit

The Scientific Veterinary Committee of the European Commission stated that "enriched cages and well-designed non-cage systems have already been shown to have a number of welfare advantages over battery systems in their present form".[61] Supporters of battery husbandry contend that alternative systems such as free range also have welfare problems, such as increases in cannibalism, feather pecking and vent pecking. A recent review of welfare in battery cages made the point that such welfare issues are problems of management, unlike the issues of behavioural deprivation, which are inherent in a system that keeps hens in such cramped and barren conditions.[65] Free-range egg producers can limit or eliminate injurious pecking, particularly feather pecking, through such strategies as providing environmental enrichment, feeding mash instead of pellets, keeping roosters in with the hens, and arranging nest boxes so hens are not exposed to each other's vents;[65] similar strategies are more restricted or impossible in battery cages.

See also edit

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External links edit

  • The Battery Hen Welfare Trust
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 November 2006. Retrieved 14 April 2008. from. Archived from the original on 24 February 2008. Retrieved 7 February 2016. ISBN 0-9658942-7-4
  • EU battery cage ban

battery, cage, housing, system, used, various, animal, production, methods, primarily, laying, hens, name, arises, from, arrangement, rows, columns, identical, cages, connected, unit, artillery, battery, although, term, usually, applied, poultry, farming, simi. Battery cages are a housing system used for various animal production methods but primarily for egg laying hens The name arises from the arrangement of rows and columns of identical cages connected in a unit as in an artillery battery Although the term is usually applied to poultry farming similar cage systems are used for other animals Battery cages have generated controversy between advocates for animal welfare and industrial producers Chickens in multiple occupancy battery cages Contents 1 Battery cages in practice 1 1 The EU ban on battery caged hens 1 2 Other examples of caged animals 2 History 3 Legislation 3 1 Australia 3 2 Bhutan 3 3 Canada 3 4 European Union 3 5 India 3 6 New Zealand 3 7 Norway 3 8 Switzerland 3 9 United States 4 Welfare concerns 4 1 Chick culling 4 2 Beak trimming 4 3 Cage size 4 4 Light manipulation 4 5 Osteoporosis 4 6 Forced moulting 5 Improving welfare for egg producing hens 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBattery cages in practice editThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2023 Robotic cages are the predominant form of housing for laying hens worldwide 1 2 3 They reduce aggression and cannibalism among hens but are barren restrict movement prevent many natural behaviours and increase rates of osteoporosis 3 As of 2014 approximately 95 percent of eggs in the United States were produced in battery cages 4 In the United Kingdom statistics from the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs DEFRA indicate that 50 of eggs produced in the UK throughout 2010 were from cages 45 from free range 5 from barns 5 The EU ban on battery caged hens edit The Council of the European Union Directive 1999 74 EC 6 banned conventional battery cages in the EU starting in January 2012 for welfare reasons leading to a significant decrease in the number of eggs from battery cages in the EU 7 8 The 2012 battery cage ban was publicised as heralding an end to caged hens throughout Europe but it created a widely held misconception that all laying hens in the UK are now either free range or barn birds That is not the case although battery cages are illegal farmers have skirted the ban by providing slightly bigger cages with enrichment such as perches The hens in these conditions are now called ex cage colony hens 9 Other examples of caged animals edit Battery cages are also used for mink rabbit chinchilla and fox in fur farming and most recently for the Asian palm civet for kopi luwak production of coffee nbsp Battery cages for sun bears reared for their bile nbsp Battery cages for mink reared for their fur nbsp Battery cages for silver foxes reared for their fur nbsp Battery cages for civets reared for kopi luwak coffee productionHistory edit nbsp A chicken coop from the 1950sAn early reference to battery cages appears in Milton Arndt s 1931 book Battery Brooding where he reports that his cage flock was healthier and had higher egg production than his conventional flock 10 At this early date battery cages already had the sloped floor that allowed eggs to roll to the front of the cage where they were easily collected by the farmer and out of the hens reach Arndt also mentions the use of conveyor belts under the cages to remove manure which provides better air control quality and reduces fly breeding 10 Original battery cages extended the technology used in battery brooders which were cages with a wire mesh floor and integral heating elements for brooding chicks The wire floor allowed the manure to pass through removing it from the chicks environment and reducing the risk of manure borne diseases citation needed Early battery cages were often used for selecting hens based on performance since it is easy to track how many eggs each hen is laying if only one hen is placed in a cage Later this was combined with artificial insemination giving a technique where each egg s parentage is known This method is still used today citation needed source source source source Video advertising the system in the early history of the battery cageEarly reports from Arndt about battery cages were enthusiastic Arndt reported This form of battery is coming into widespread use throughout the country and apparently is solving a number of the troubles encountered with laying hens in the regular laying house on the floor In the first edition of this book I spoke of my experimental work with 220 pullets which were retained for one year in individual cages At the end of this year it was found that the birds confined in the batteries outlaid considerably the same size flock in the regular houses The birds consume less feed than those on the floor and this coupled with the increased production made them more profitable than the same number of pullets in the laying house 10 A number of progressive poultrymen from all over the United States and some in foreign countries cooperated with me in carrying on experimental work with this type of battery and each and every one of them were very well satisfied with the results obtained In fact a number of them have since placed their entire laying flocks in individual hen batteries 10 In 1967 Samuel Duff filed a patent for battery cages in patent US3465722 11 The use of laying batteries increased gradually becoming the dominant method somewhat before the integration of the egg industry in the 1960s The practice of battery cages was criticized in Ruth Harrison s landmark book Animal Machines published in 1964 12 nbsp A simple battery cage system with no conveyors for feed or eggsIn 1990 North and Bell reported that 75 percent of all commercial layers in the world and 95 percent in the United States were kept in cages 13 By all accounts a caged layer facility is more expensive to build than high density floor confinement but can be cheaper to operate if designed to minimize labor North and Bell report the following economic advantages to laying cages It is easier to care for the pullets no birds are underfoot Floor eggs are eliminated Eggs are cleaner Culling is expedited In most instances less feed is required to produce a dozen eggs Broodiness is eliminated More pullets may be housed in a given house floor space Internal parasites are eliminated Labor requirements are generally much reduced 13 They also cite disadvantages to cages The handling of manure may be a problem Generally flies become a greater nuisance The investment per pullet may be higher than in the case of floor operations There is a slightly higher percentage of blood spots in the eggs The bones are more fragile and processors often discount the fowl price 13 Disadvantages one and two can be eliminated by manure conveyors but some industrial systems do not feature manure conveyors 14 Legislation edit nbsp vte World laws on battery cages Nationwide ban on battery cages Some subnational bans on battery cages Nationwide phaseout of battery cages in progress Battery cages legal No dataThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2009 Efforts are being undertaken to prohibit battery cages in countries around the world including Bhutan India Brazil Costa Rica and Mexico 15 Australia edit Attempts to change the law have been an object of contention RSPCA Australia has been officially campaigning to abolish both battery cages and furnished cages and to prohibit the sale of cage eggs ever since the 2001 revision of the Poultry Code 16 The 2009 Code of Practice permits the use of battery cages A written commitment by the Federal government to review the practice was scheduled in 2010 there was no further communication During 2013 the state government of Tasmania was planning to phase out battery cages and budgeting for financial compensation for affected farmers but this was scrapped following the 2014 election 17 18 The Australian Capital Territory prohibited battery cages in early 2014 19 The Greens were committed to also legally prohibit them in late 2014 in Victoria 19 In 2019 New South Wales Legislative Council member Emma Hurst established and chaired a NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into the Use of Battery Cages for Hens in the Egg Production Industry 20 The Inquiry recommended that all food products containing eggs from caged hens should be clearly labelled for the benefit of consumers and a phase out of battery cage hen farming in NSW 21 22 Bhutan edit Bhutan outlawed battery cages in 2012 15 Canada edit In February 2016 90 percent of egg laying hens in Canada lived in battery cages That month negotiations between egg farmers animal welfarists and the government resulted in a moratorium on construction of new battery cages from 1 April 2017 and a gradual 15 year phaseout of battery cages towards enriched cage or cage free systems by 2036 23 Activist group Mercy for Animals was pleased with the announced phaseout but called the timetable simply outrageous and argued that more urgency was required some food companies such as Cara Foods Tim Hortons Burger King McDonald s Wendy s Starbucks and Subway restaurant announced they would phaseout non cage free eggs much sooner than 2036 23 European Union edit In 1999 the Council of the European Union Directive 1999 74 EC 6 banned the conventional battery cage in the EU in 2012 after a 12 year phase out In their 1996 report the European Commission s Scientific Veterinary Committee SVC condemned the battery cage concluding It is clear that because of its small size and its barrenness the battery cage as used at present has inherent severe disadvantages for the welfare of hens The EU Directive allows enriched or furnished cages to be used Under the directive enriched cages must be at least 45 centimetres 18 inches high and must provide each hen with at least 750 square centimetres 116 square inches of space 600 square centimetres 93 sq in of this must be usable area the other 150 square centimetres 23 sq in is for a nest box The cage must also contain litter perches and claw shortening devices Some animal welfare organisations such as Compassion in World Farming have criticised this move calling for enriched cages to be prohibited as they believe they provide no significant or worthwhile welfare benefits compared with conventional battery cages Germany banned conventional battery cages in 2007 five years earlier than required by the EU Directive 24 and has prohibited enriched cages from 2012 25 Mahi Klosterhalfen of the Albert Schweitzer Foundation has been instrumental in a strategic campaign against battery cages in Germany 26 India edit In 2013 the Animal Welfare Board of India concluded that battery cages were in violation of Section 11 1 e of the 1960 Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act and issued an advisory to all state governments stating that battery cages should not be used and existing ones should be phased out by 2017 27 This interpretation has been followed by several states 15 and confirmed by several courts such as the Punjab and Haryana High Court March 2014 27 and the Delhi High Court 28 Yet some battery cages have been found to continue operating illegally after 1 January 2017 29 New Zealand edit On 7 December 2012 as part of a new welfare code for the poultry industry the New Zealand government implemented a ban on the construction of new battery cages and initiated a ten year phase out of all battery cages in the country by 2022 As an intermediate goal 45 percent of battery cages were to be removed by 2018 30 Norway edit In April 2010 the Norwegian grocery chain REMA 1000 decided to stop selling eggs from both battery and furnished cage hens by the year 2012 to coincide with the scheduled EU wide prohibition on battery cages 31 Norwegian law followed EU legislation and on 1 January 2012 also prohibited battery cages known as tradisjonelle bur or traditional cages in Norwegian making furnished cages known as miljobur or environmental cages in Norwegian the minimum legal requirement 32 33 Several more industry groups have decided to voluntarily phase out furnished cages as well such as NorgesGruppen by 2019 34 and Nortura by 2024 32 while in April 2017 the Green Party proposed to ban furnished cages throughout the country by 2025 34 Switzerland edit Switzerland banned battery cages from 1 January 1992 it was the first country to impose such a ban 35 36 United States edit nbsp US States with bans on battery cages for laying hens Laws prohibiting battery cages Laws prohibiting battery cages and cage egg sale Battery cages legal vteAs of March 2020 California Massachusetts Washington Michigan Ohio and Rhode Island had passed laws banning the use of battery cages and the former three additionally banned the sale of eggs produced in battery cages 37 Michigan s ban of battery cages and the sale of non cage free eggs in the state adopted in November 2019 will enter into force at the end of 2024 38 The passage of California Proposition 2 in 2008 aimed in part to reduce or eliminate the problems associated with battery cages by setting the standard for space relative to free movement and wingspan rather than cage size Battery cages are illegal in Michigan due to HB 5127 passed in 2009 which mandates that certain farm animals have enough room to stand up lie down turn around and extend their limbs rather than being confined in tiny cages 39 In Ohio there is a moratorium on permits for the construction of new battery cages as of June 2010 40 Oregon SB 805 also banned battery cages and set forth a transition to enriched colony cages doubling the space per egg laying hen 41 42 This law served as the model for a national agreement between the Humane Society of the United States and the United Egg Producers 43 Welfare concerns editThere are several welfare concerns regarding the battery cage system of housing and husbandry These are presented below in the approximate chronological order they would influence the hens Chick culling edit Main article Chick culling Due to modern selective breeding laying hen strains are different from those of meat production strains Male birds of the laying strains do not lay eggs and are unsuitable for meat production therefore they are culled soon after being sexed often on the day of hatching 44 Methods of culling include cervical dislocation asphyxiation by carbon dioxide and maceration using a high speed grinder Animal rights groups have used videos of live chicks being placed into macerators as evidence of cruelty in the egg production industry 45 Maceration together with cervical dislocation and asphyxiation by carbon dioxide are all considered acceptable methods of euthanasia by the American Veterinary Medical Association 46 47 Consumers may also be appalled simply by the death of animals that are not subsequently eaten 48 Beak trimming edit Main article Debeaking To reduce the harmful effects of feather pecking cannibalism and vent pecking most chicks eventually going into battery cages are beak trimmed This is often performed on the first day after hatching simultaneously with sexing and receiving vaccinations Beak trimming is a procedure considered by many scientists to cause acute pain and distress with possible chronic pain it is practised on chicks for all types of housing systems not only battery cages 49 Cage size edit nbsp Battery cageAt approximately 16 weeks of age pullets hens which have not yet started to lay are placed into cages In countries with relevant legislation floor space for battery cages ranges upwards from 300 square centimetres 47 sq in per bird EU standards in 2003 called for at least 550 square centimetres 85 sq in per hen 50 In the US the current recommendation by the United Egg Producers is 67 86 square inches 430 550 square centimetres per bird 51 The space available to each hen in a battery cage has often been described as less than the size of a sheet of A4 paper 624 square centimetres 96 7 sq in 52 Other people have commented that a typical cage is about the size of a filing cabinet drawer and holds eight to ten hens 14 53 Behavioural studies showed that when turning hens used 540 1 006 square centimetres 83 7 155 9 sq in when stretching wings 653 1 118 square centimetres 101 2 173 3 sq in when wing flapping 860 1 980 square centimetres 133 307 sq in when feather ruffling 676 1 604 square centimetres 104 8 248 6 sq in when preening 814 1 240 square centimetres 126 2 192 2 sq in and when ground scratching 540 to 1005 cm2 54 A space allowance of 550 square centimetres 85 sq in would prevent hens in battery cages from performing these behaviours without touching another hen Animal welfare scientists have been critical of battery cages because of these space restrictions 55 and it is widely considered that hens suffer boredom and frustration when unable to perform these behaviours 56 Spatial restriction can lead to a wide range of abnormal behaviours some of which are injurious to the hens or their cagemates Light manipulation edit Further information Feather pecking Light manipulations nbsp Battery cages note the low light intensity beyond range of the camera flashgunTo reduce the harmful effects of feather pecking cannibalism and vent pecking hens in battery cages and other housing systems are often kept at low light intensities e g less than ten lux Low light intensities may be associated with welfare costs to the hens as they prefer to eat in brightly lit environments 57 and prefer brightly lit areas for active behaviour but dim less than ten lux for inactive behaviour 58 Dimming the lights can also cause problems when the intensity is then abruptly increased temporarily to inspect the hens this has been associated as a risk factor of increased feather pecking 59 and the birds can become frightened resulting in panic type hysteria reactions which can increase the risk of injury Being indoors hens in battery cages do not see sunlight Whilst there is no scientific evidence for this being a welfare problem some animal advocates indicate it is a concern 60 Furnished cages and some other non cage indoor systems would also prevent hens seeing natural light throughout their lives Osteoporosis edit Several studies have indicated that toward the end of the laying phase approximately 72 weeks of age a combination of high calcium demand for egg production and a lack of exercise can lead to osteoporosis This can occur in all housing systems for egg laying hens but is particularly prevalent in battery cage systems where it has sometimes been called cage layer osteoporosis 61 Osteoporosis leads to the skeleton becoming fragile and an increased risk of bone breakage particularly in the legs and keel bone Fractures may occur whilst the hens are in the cage and these are usually discovered at depopulation as old healed breaks or they might be fresh breaks which occurred during the process of depopulation One study showed that 24 6 percent of hens from battery cages had recent keel fractures whereas hens in furnished cages barn and free range had 3 6 percent 1 2 percent and 1 3 percent respectively However hens from battery cages experienced fewer old breaks 17 7 compared to hens in barn 69 1 free range 59 8 and furnished cages 31 7 49 Forced moulting edit Main article Forced moulting Flocks are sometimes force moulted rather than being slaughtered to reinvigorate egg laying This involves complete withdrawal of food and sometimes water for seven to fourteen days 62 or sufficiently long to cause a body weight loss of 25 to 35 percent 63 This stimulates the hen to lose her feathers but also reinvigorates egg production Some flocks may be force moulted several times In 2003 more than 75 percent of all flocks were moulted in the US 64 This temporary starving of the hens is seen as inhumane and is the main point of objection by critics and opponents of the practice The alternative most often employed is to slaughter the hens instead of moulting them citation needed Improving welfare for egg producing hens editThe Scientific Veterinary Committee of the European Commission stated that enriched cages and well designed non cage systems have already been shown to have a number of welfare advantages over battery systems in their present form 61 Supporters of battery husbandry contend that alternative systems such as free range also have welfare problems such as increases in cannibalism feather pecking and vent pecking A recent review of welfare in battery cages made the point that such welfare issues are problems of management unlike the issues of behavioural deprivation which are inherent in a system that keeps hens in such cramped and barren conditions 65 Free range egg producers can limit or eliminate injurious pecking particularly feather pecking through such strategies as providing environmental enrichment feeding mash instead of pellets keeping roosters in with the hens and arranging nest boxes so hens are not exposed to each other s vents 65 similar strategies are more restricted or impossible in battery cages See also edit nbsp Agriculture portalAnimal rights Animal welfare Open rescueReferences edit Horne P L M Van Achterbosch T J 2008 Animal welfare in poultry production systems impact of EU standards on world trade World s Poultry Science Journal Cambridge University Press CUP 64 1 40 52 doi 10 1017 s0043933907001705 S2CID 41783559 Archived from the original on 20 July 2018 Retrieved 11 February 2017 Leenstra F Napel J Ten Visscher J Sambeek F Van 2016 Layer breeding programmes in changing production environments a historic perspective World s Poultry Science Journal Cambridge University Press CUP 72 1 21 36 doi 10 1017 s0043933915002743 S2CID 88880569 a b Meseret S 2016 A review of poultry welfare in conventional production system Livestock Research for Rural Development 28 12 Greene J L Cowan T 2014 Table Egg Production and Hen Welfare Agreement and Legislative Proposals PDF CRS Report for Congress 42534 Archived from the original PDF on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 11 February 2017 50 of UK eggs laid by free range hens theranger co uk Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 9 December 2011 a b European Union Council Directive 1999 74 EC Official Journal of the European Communities European Union 19 July 1999 Archived from the original on 7 May 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Scientists and Experts on Battery Cages and Laying Hen Welfare PDF Archived PDF from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 18 December 2014 Animal Welfare Commission report confirms the potential benefits of banning conventional battery cages for laying hens europa eu Archived from the original on 12 January 2018 Retrieved 21 December 2014 Circular from the British Hen Welfare Trust a b c d Arndt Milton 1931 Battery Brooding 2nd ed Orange Judd Publishing pp 308 312 United States Patent Office 1969 Battery cages Retrieved 4 May 2013 Md Egg Farm Accused of Cruelty Washington Post 6 June 2001 Archived from the original on 26 July 2009 Retrieved 30 July 2009 a b c North Mack O Donald E Bell 1990 Commercial Chicken Production Manual 4th ed Van Nostrand Reinhold pp 297 315 ISBN 0 87055 446 8 a b Singer Peter 2006 In Defense of Animals Wiley Blackwell p 175 ISBN 1 4051 1941 1 a b c Hotzel Maria Jose Filho Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado 2013 ISAE 2013 Proceedings of the 47th Congress of the International Society of Applied Ethology 2 6 June 2013 Florianopolis Brazil Understanding Behaviour to Improve Livelihood Wageningen Wageningen Academic Pub p 162 ISBN 9789086862252 Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Frank Chung 4 October 2015 Do cage eggs have a future in Australia News com au News Corp Australia Archived from the original on 6 September 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 http www abc net au news 2012 05 18 tasmania to ban battery hen farming 4019200M permanent dead link ABC Tasmania to ban Battery Hen Farming Tas government scraps free range egg plan News com au 24 April 2014 Archived from the original on 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World Farming ciwf org uk Archived from the original on 31 March 2014 Retrieved 26 March 2010 Jelle Brandsma 15 December 2011 De legbatterij verdwijnt maar nog niet overal Trouw in Dutch Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 VegTalk Podcast Mahi Klosterhalfen and the End of the Battery Cage Archived from the original on 20 April 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2011 a b Vijay Singh 7 March 2014 Court issues notice against confinement of egg laying hens in battery cages The Times of India Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Vishwa Mohad 2 May 2019 Draft rules prohibit keeping hens in cramped battery cages The Times of India Archived from the original on 7 November 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Neha Madaan 26 February 2017 Poultry industry uses battery cages despite government ban The Times of India Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 29 May 2020 New battery hen cages banned The New Zealand Herald 6 December 2012 Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Fjorfe nr 3 2010 a b Hans Olav Rise 9 September 2018 Nortura kjenner seg pressa vekk fra buregg Nationen in Norwegian Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Burhoner i Norge YouTube in Norwegian Dyrevernalliansen Norwegian Animal Protection Alliance 10 March 2010 Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 Retrieved 30 May 2020 a b Ola Fintland 28 April 2017 Burhoner blir stortingsmat Aftenposten in Norwegian Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Haltung Schweizer Bauern www schweizerbauern ch Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Grandin Temple 2015 Improving Animal Welfare 2nd Edition A Practical Approach London CABI p 118 ISBN 9781780644677 Archived from the original on 18 January 2023 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Vogeler Colette S 14 April 2020 Politicizing Farm Animal Welfare A Comparative Study of Policy Change in the United States of America Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis Research and Practice Informa UK Limited 23 5 6 526 543 doi 10 1080 13876988 2020 1742069 ISSN 1387 6988 S2CID 218809455 Jerilyn Jordan 22 November 2019 Michigan will become 5th state to enforce cage free egg production thanks to new bill Metro Times Archived from the original on 23 May 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Mich Gov Granholm signs historic farm animal welfare measure Humane Society of the United States 12 October 2009 Archived from the original on 16 May 2017 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Landmark Ohio Animal Welfare Agreement Reached Among HSUS Ohioans for Humane Farms Gov Strickland and Leading Livestock Organizations Humane Society of the United States 30 June 2010 Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2015 Oregon Department of Agriculture Requirements and Inspections www oregon gov Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 18 April 2017 SB805 2011 Regular Session Oregon Legislative Information System olis leg state or us Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Landmark Agreement to Help Millions of Hens A Humane Nation 7 July 2011 Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Egg laying and male birds Vegsoc org Archived from the original on 22 February 2009 Video Shows Chicks Ground Up Alive at Egg Hatchery The Associated Press 2 September 2009 Archived from the original on 14 July 2022 Retrieved 13 August 2020 AVMA Guidelines for the Euthanasia of Animals PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 July 2012 Executive Board meets pressing needs September 15 2006 Archived from the original on 24 May 2012 Morris M C 2008 The Ethics and Politics of Animal Welfare in New Zealand Broiler Chicken Production as a Case Study Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 22 15 30 doi 10 1007 s10806 008 9128 3 S2CID 154609136 a b Sherwin C M Richards G J and Nicol C J 2010 Comparison of the welfare of layer hens in 4 housing systems in the UK British Poultry Science 51 4 488 499 Chickens Layer Housing M C Appleby Encyclopedia of Animal Science doi 10 1081 E EAS 120019534 United Egg Producers 2010 Animal Husbandry Guidelines for U S Egg Laying Flocks PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 6 August 2012 Animal Pragmatism Compassion Over Killing Wants to Make the Anti Meat Message a Little More Palatable Washington Post 3 September 2003 Archived from the original on 3 December 2012 Retrieved 30 July 2009 Becker Elizabeth 4 December 2002 Advocates for Animals Turn Attention to Chickens The New York Times Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 30 July 2009 Stamp Dawkins M and Hardie S 1989 Space needs of laying hens British Poultry Science 30 413 416 doi 10 1080 00071668908417163 Nicol C J and Dawkins M 1989 No room for manoeuvre New Scientist 16 September 1989 Appleby M C Mench J A Hughes B O 2004 Poultry Behaviour and Welfare Wallingford and Cambridge MA CABI Publishing ISBN 0 85199 667 1 Prescott N B and Wathes C M 2002 Preference and motivation of laying hens to eat under different illuminances and the effect of illuminance on eating behaviour British Poultry Science 43 190 195 Davis N J Prescott N B Savory C J and Wathes C M 1999 Preferences of growing fowls for different light intensities in relation to age strain and behaviour Animal Welfare 8 193 203 Green L E Lewis K Kimpton A and Nicol C J 2000 Cross sectional study of the prevalence of feather pecking in laying hens in alternative systems and its association with management and disease Veterinary Record 147 233 238 Against Animal Cruelty Tasmania AACT Battery Hen Campaign Archived from the original on 20 September 2011 a b Scientific Veterinary Committee of the European Commission 1996 Report on the Welfare of Layer Hens PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 September 2006 Patwardhan D and King A 2011 Review feed withdrawal and non feed withdrawal moult World s Poultry Science Journal 67 253 268 Webster A B 2003 Physiology and behavior of the hen during induced moult Poultry Science 82 992 1002 Yousaf M and Chaudhry A S 2008 History changing scenarios and future strategies to induce moulting in laying hens World s Poultry Science Journal 64 65 75 a b Morris M C 2006 The ethics and politics of the caged layer hen debate in New Zealand Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 19 5 495 514 doi 10 1007 s10806 006 9007 8 S2CID 154114874 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battery cages The Battery Hen Welfare Trust Compassion in World Farming Egg laying hens The State of the Animals II 2003 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 November 2006 Retrieved 14 April 2008 from The State of the Animals II 2003 the Humane Society of the United States Archived from the original on 24 February 2008 Retrieved 7 February 2016 ISBN 0 9658942 7 4 EU battery cage ban Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battery cage amp oldid 1183350924, wikipedia, 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