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Journal ArticleDOI

In pursuit of peak animal welfare; the need to prioritize the meaningful over the measurable.

Jake S. Veasey
- 01 Dec 2017 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 6, pp 413-425
TLDR
The case is made that a tension exists between management that prioritizes aspects of care reflecting popular animal welfare metrics such as those relating to physical health, and management that emphasizes psychological wellbeing.
Abstract
Despite the diversity of animal welfare definitions, most recognise the centrality of the feelings of animals which are currently impossible to measure directly. As a result, animal welfare assessment is heavily reliant upon the indirect measurement of factors that either affect what animals feel, or are effected by how they feel. Physiological and health orientated measures have emerged as popular metrics for assessing welfare because they are quantifiable, can effect and be affected by how animals feel and have merits regardless of their relationship to the feelings of animals. However, their popularity in animal welfare assessment has led to them having a disproportionate influence on animal management to the detriment of animal welfare in numerous instances. Here, the case is made that a tension exists between management that prioritizes aspects of care reflecting popular animal welfare metrics such as those relating to physical health, and management that emphasizes psychological wellbeing. By re-examining the relative merits of physical and psychological priorities in animal management, an alternate animal welfare paradigm emerges less tied to traditional welfare metrics. This paradigm theorizes about the possibility for an optimal animal welfare state to exist where managed animal populations provided essential psychological outlets but protected from key physical stressors routinely experienced in the wild, might experience higher levels of welfare than wild populations would routinely experience. The proposition that optimal animal welfare could theoretically be achieved in well managed and well designed captive environments challenges a widely held ethical perspective that captivity is inherently bad for animal welfare.

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Citations
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Journal Article

Understanding Animal Welfare: The Science in its Cultural Context

TL;DR: There is an apparent need and an increasing market for the “paperback textbook” one of which is the subject of this review, and Understanding Animal Welfare is the 4th of the current 5, in the Animal Welfare Book Series.
Journal ArticleDOI

"Feelings and Fitness" Not "Feelings or Fitness"-The Raison d'être of Conservation Welfare, Which Aligns Conservation and Animal Welfare Objectives.

TL;DR: This paper summarizes key points developed by a group of conservation and animal welfare scientists discussing scientific assessment of wild animal welfare and barriers to progress and proposes the formal development of a new discipline, Conservation Welfare, integrating the expertise of scientists from both fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dolphins’ willingness to participate (WtP) in positive reinforcement training as a potential welfare indicator, where WtP predicts early changes in health status

TL;DR: It was found that dolphins with a higher WtP score also had a significantly better health status, ate a higher percentage of their daily food, and a lower occurrence of new rake marks, and this long-term study showed that qualitative measures can be both practical and valid when assessing dolphin welfare.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predator size and prey size–gut capacity ratios determine kill frequency and carcass production in terrestrial carnivorous mammals

TL;DR: A kill frequency model accounting for carnivore mass, prey mass, pack size, partial consumption of prey and carnivore gut capacity was developed and predicted a negative relationship between predator size and kill frequency for large prey-feeders, but for small prey- feeders, this negative relationship was absent.
References
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Journal Article

A scientific conception of animal welfare that reflects ethical concerns.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that three types of problems are causes of ethical concern over the quality of life of animals and that they together define the subject matter of animal welfare science.
Journal ArticleDOI

A stroll through the worlds of animals and men: A picture book of invisible worlds

Jakob von Uexküll
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
TL;DR: A soap bubble around each living being represents its own world, filled with the perceptions which it alone knows as discussed by the authors, and when we ourselves step into one of these bubbles, the familiar meadow is transformed.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrative and functional framework for the study of animal emotion and mood

TL;DR: D discrete and dimensional approaches are brought together to offer a structure for integrating different discrete emotions that provides a functional perspective on the adaptive value of emotional states, and suggest how long-term mood states arise from short-term discrete emotions.
Book

Understanding Animal Welfare

TL;DR: In debates about the welfare of animals, different people have tended to emphasize different concerns as mentioned in this paper, with one side valuing a simple, natural life while the other values progress, productivity, and a life improved by science and technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive bias as an indicator of animal emotion and welfare: Emerging evidence and underlying mechanisms

TL;DR: This paper found that animals in a negative affective state are more likely to respond to ambiguous cues as if they predict the negative event (a "pessimistic" response), than animals in more positive states.
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