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Open AccessJournal Article

A pilot study to access whether high expansion CO2-enriched foam is acceptable for on-farm emergency killing of poultry

M.A. Gerritzen, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 3, pp 285-288
TLDR
It is concluded that CO2 foam has the potential to be an acceptable method of killing poultry and is advisable for this method to be examined on a larger scale in order to assess the implications of physiological (EEG and ECG) measurements on welfare.
Abstract
This pilot experiment was conducted to ascertain whether CO2-enriched high expansion foam could be an acceptable and efficient alternative in emergency killing of poultry. This method could have wide-ranging applications but with particular emphasis on small (backyard) flocks, free-range sheds or open (naturally-ventilated) housings. The objectives of the study were as follows: 1) to determine whether the injection of foam and being covered with foam leads to fear or panic reactions in birds; 2) to determine the time taken to render birds unconscious and dead and 3) to determine whether any pathological abnormalities are observed post mortem. Six laying hens were individually exposed to increasing levels of CO2 foam with an expansion rate of 300:1. The test box containing individual birds filled with foam within 30 s. During foaming, two out of six birds tried to escape from the test box (1-2 attempts per bird). Apart from displaying greater alertness, birds showed no aversive reactions to the CO2 foam. Twenty-to-thirty seconds after being covered with foam, five of the six birds demonstrated one or two forcable or convulsive movements. Movement patterns and muscle jerks immediately following this convulsive movement led us to believe that birds lost consciousness at this moment and, within approximately three minutes, all birds had ceased to have a heartbeat. Macroscopic post mortem examination of the birds revealed no abnormalities and microscopic examination showed moderate bronchiolar bleeding and a small amount of alveolar bleeding. After assessing behavioural parameters, measurements of heart rate and pathological data, it is our conclusion that CO2 foam has the potential to be an acceptable method of killing poultry. It is advisable for this method to be examined on a larger scale in order to assess the implications of physiological (EEG and ECG) measurements on welfare.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological and behavioral responses of poultry exposed to gas-filled high expansion foam

TL;DR: These trials provide proof-of-principle that submersion in gas-filled, high expansion foam provides a rapid and highly effective method of euthanasia, which may have potential to provide humane emergency killing or routine depopulation.
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Comparison of Water-Based Foam and Inert-Gas Mass Emergency Depopulation Methods

TL;DR: Foam was as consistent as CO2 gassing and more consistent than argon-CO2 gassed, and there were no statistically significant differences between foam methods.
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Electroencephalogram-Based Methodology for Determining Unconsciousness During Depopulation

TL;DR: An electroencephalogram (EEG) frequency domain–based approach for determining the point at which a bird loses consciousness in poultry, and the correlation between LOP and A/D ratio indicates that the methodology is appropriate for determining unconsciousness.
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Mass Emergency Water-Based Foam Depopulation of Poultry

TL;DR: In broilers, turkeys, and layer hens, water-based foam results in equivalent times to unconsciousness, terminal convulsions, and altered terminal cardiac activity; with Pekin ducks, however, CO2 gas resulted in shorter times to key physiologic states, in particular unconsciouss, altered terminals cardiac activity, motion cessation, and brain death.
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Killing for purposes other than slaughter: poultry

TL;DR: Outcome tables linking hazards, welfare consequences, animal‐based measures, origins, preventive and corrective measures were developed for each process and Mitigation measures to minimise welfare consequences were also proposed.
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