Dr. Trevor DeVries

WEBINAR “THE IMPACT OF COW BEHAVIOR ON RUMEN HEALTH,” DR. TREVOR DEVRIES

In this webinar, Dr. Trevor DeVries, Professor at the University of Guelph (Canada) and a recognized expert in dairy cattle feeding and management, shared key insights and practical recommendations for improving rumen health in cows.

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN FROM THIS VIDEO

  • How cows’ feeding behavior affects rumen function and health.

  • The connection between rumen health and animals’ behavioral traits.

  • Practical methods to improve rumen health through effective management and feeding.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dr. Trevor DeVries is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Animal Biosciences at the University of Guelph, Canada.

He received his Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from the University of British Columbia in 2001 and completed his Ph.D. in 2006.

Dr. DeVries leads an award-winning research program and is the author of over 220 peer-reviewed scientific papers. His research focuses on the nutrition, behavior, welfare, and management of dairy cattle.

He actively translates his research into practice, as reflected in more than 300 scientific presentations delivered worldwide. In addition, he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses related to dairy cattle management and welfare and serves as a mentor for his students.

Don’t miss the chance to dive into the topic with one of the industry’s leading experts!

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СANNIBALISM IN POULTRY: A DEEP DIVE INTO THE PROBLEM, CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES, AND PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS

Cannibalism in poultry is not merely a rare behavioral anomaly. It is a widespread, complex, and often overlooked issue that affects a farm’s health, welfare, and economic performance. Regardless of the poultry species—layers, broilers, turkeys, or breeders—under certain conditions, birds may start pecking each other, sometimes to the point of death. If timely measures are not taken, this can lead to catastrophic consequences. The process always has deep-rooted causes. Pecking behavior is natural for birds. But when instincts turn into aggression towards conspecifics, it reflects a breakdown in adaptive mechanisms, often due to improper feeding or management.

WHAT IS CANNIBALISM IN BIRDS?

Cannibalism is a pathological behavior in which birds peck and injure other birds, often eating feathers, skin, or even internal organs. Several forms are recognized:

  1. Feather pecking — birds pluck and consume feathers, especially on wings, tails, and backs. This leads to exposed skin, becoming a target for deeper injuries.
  2. Cloacal cannibalism — a hazardous form. During or after egg-laying, the cloaca protrudes and becomes bright red, attracting other birds that begin pecking at it. This often results in death.
  3. Tissue pecking — development of deep wounds, consumption of muscles, blood, and sometimes internal organs. The consequences are painful and often fatal.

Fact: Just 3–5% of aggressors in a flock can create a constant crisis in the poultry house.

CAUSES:

Cannibalism does not occur without cause. It is always a result of stress, nutritional deficiencies, or housing problems. The most common reasons include:

  1. Nutritional Deficiencies

Lack of high-quality protein, methionine, lysine, sodium, and sulfur reduces vitality, irritability, and behavioral deviations. When the diet fails to meet basic physiological needs, birds search for alternative sources—such as feathers. Initially, this behavior is compensatory rather than aggressive.

Interesting: Studies show that birds fed diets with animal protein exhibited less feather pecking than those fed only plant-based proteins.

  1. Lighting

Birds are susceptible to light. Excessive brightness or constant lighting causes overexcitement, restlessness, and aggression. Bright light near nest boxes is hazardous, as it highlights the blood-rich cloaca during egg-laying.

  1. Behavioral Boredom

Birds have a natural need to explore, peck, and move. If the poultry house lacks enrichment (just floor and feeder), pecking is redirected toward flock mates—even with optimal feeding. Boredom is a severe stressor.

  1. Overcrowding

High stocking density creates spatial stress. The inability to escape or avoid others is a key trigger for aggression. Stress is unevenly distributed—weak birds become victims more often.

  1. Diseases and Parasites

Sick or infested birds behave and look differently, attracting attention. For example, mites cause itching, leading to feather loss and exposed skin, which can trigger a chain reaction.

HOW TO RECOGNIZE THE PROBLEM?

Signs are often subtle. Watch for:

  1. Feather loss in specific areas;
  2. Blood stains or dried blood in nests;
  3. Unusual vocalizations in the house;
  4. Changes in behavior—birds isolating themselves or acting anxious;
  5. Uneven flock appearance.

Tip: Enter the poultry house quietly and unexpectedly. Observe silently for 5–10 minutes to assess the real situation.

BUSINESS IMPACT

Cannibalism is not only a welfare issue—it causes direct financial losses:

  1. 10–30% drop in egg production;
  2. Up to 40% increased feed intake in featherless birds;
  3. Injuries, mortality, and increased veterinary costs;
  4. Deterioration in carcass quality.

HOW TO PREVENT CANNIBALISM

Feeding

  1. Maintain a stable, well-balanced diet rich in amino acids, trace elements, and fiber;
  2. Avoid sudden changes in feed formulation;
  3. Use feed additives that reduce excitability.

Lighting Management

  1. Avoid excessive brightness. Light in nest areas should not exceed 1 lux.

Environmental Enrichment

  1. Use straw bales, corn cobs, pecking blocks;
  2. Provide perches, platforms, and varied surfaces.

Flock Management

  1. Isolate injured and aggressive birds;
  2. Monitor flock uniformity: body weight, age, activity;
  3. Daily behavior monitoring.

Early Prevention

  1. Provide toys, bedding, and sand access from day one;
  2. Introduce birds gradually to new environments;
  3. Use infrared beak treatment for selected batches.

CONCLUSION

Cannibalism is not the deviation of a single bird—it’s a reflection of systemic problems. When pecking arises, it indicates nutritional, psychological, or spatial overload. The task of farm management is to detect, localize, and neutralize the source in time.

The deeper you understand your flock, the lower the risk it will “turn on itself.”

Read more about solutions for quail, turkeys and other poultry>>

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BIRD FEATHERS: A BIOLOGICAL SHIELD AND A MIRROR OF YOUR FARM

When a farmer notices birds losing feathers, the first thought is usually molting or “something’s wrong with the feed.” But feathers aren’t just a surface layer. They’re a complex, sensitive system that reacts first to invisible problems within the farm.

FEATHERS SHOW WHAT YOU CAN’T SEE

Feathers aren’t decoration. They’re a physiological structure essential for survival. They:

  • regulate heat exchange (if it fails, the bird wastes energy on heating);
  • protect the skin from damage, bacteria, and moisture;
  • help the bird survive in a hierarchical flock;
  • serve as a means of communication (including aggression/submission behaviors).

Feathers are organs with structure, follicles, blood supply, and even built-in “durability,” like a flexible design. And they require particular “fuel” to grow.

FEATHERS AS RESOURCE CONSUMERS

Few realize that feather formation is one of the most resource-intensive processes in a bird’s body. It’s not just about protein — it also needs microelements, enzymes, energy, and vitamins.

Feathers are made of β-keratin, which forms only in the presence of methionine, cystine, biotin, zinc, and other nutrients.

Even a slight deficiency of any of these — the feathers grow brittle, deformed, and weak.

And importantly — the bird’s body never prioritizes feathers. If there’s a shortage, resources go to vital organs first. Feathers suffer first.

Fun fact: Some studies show that during mild protein deficiency, birds maintained productivity, but their feathers were already in poor condition. The farmer saw the signal — but didn’t act because feed intake and weight weren’t dropping.

BEHAVIOR WRITES ON FEATHERS TOO

Feather pecking is biologically rooted. It’s not just aggression or “nervous birds.” Often, it’s:

  • an attempt to get protein under deficiency;
  • a reaction to stress, overcrowding, and bright light;
  • a result of lack of stimulation (especially in intensive systems).

Sometimes, it starts “out of nowhere” but continues for months. It triggers a chain reaction: birds get injured → feathers are damaged → more attention from others → more trauma → flock health declines.

Insight often overlooked: The location of feather loss matters. If it’s the back, wings, or tail — it’s likely pecking or rubbing due to crowding. If it’s the chest or belly — it might be contact dermatitis (from litter, ammonia, moisture).

FEATHERS AND SKIN — ONE SYSTEM

Feathers grow in close interaction with skin, follicles, and microcirculation.

Interesting fact: Feathers grow only in specific zones — pterylae. The rest of the skin is “empty” (apteriae). Nature designed it this way to reduce weight and allow mobility. But it also means every damaged follicle is a long-term local loss. Also:

  • feather follicles have a capillary network;
  • feathers self-repair thanks to microscopic hooks;
  • the bird needs strength and resources to maintain this system.

If the diet contains mycotoxins or liver function is impaired — feathers may grow deformed or fail to regenerate after molting.

WHAT REALLY AFFECTS FEATHER QUALITY?

  • Complete nutrition. No compromises. Without methionine — there are no feathers, even if “protein is present.”
  • Gut health. Digestive issues = poor nutrient absorption.
  • Microclimate. Ammonia + wet litter = contact dermatitis, skin burns, disrupted feather growth.
  • Stocking density. More crowding = more mechanical damage.
  • Parasite-free environment. Lice, mites, and fungi — all target feathers. Birds will peck them off.

INSTEAD OF A CONCLUSION — A REMINDER

Feathers reflect what’s going on inside the bird. They don’t lie. They don’t mask. They don’t stay silent. You have to know how to read them. They show:

  • what the bird eats,
  • how much stress it’s under,
  • what the barn temperature is,
  • how the liver is functioning,
  • if there’s competition for space.

Sometimes, all it takes is a closer look at the feathers to diagnose the whole farm. And that’s not just “bird stuff.” That’s a strategy.

Learn more about solution for quails, turkeys and other poultry>>

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HOW FEED HYGIENE AFFECTS COW HEALTH: THE ROLE OF ENTEROBACTERIA AND CLOSTRIDIUM

Frequently, when we talk about high quality forages and TMR, we focus on the nutritional aspects: digestibility, crude protein, starch, etc. However, an aspect that is often overlooked, and is just as important as the nutrient content of a diet, is the anti-nutritional components and their potential impact on health and productivity.

Anti-nutritional factors are substances that, when present in animal feed or water, either directly or indirectly through their metabolic products reduce the availability of one or more nutrients. When focusing on hygiene of forage or TMR, the anti-nutritional factors that would draw the most intense scrutiny would be the pathogenic microorganisms and toxins.

The most common pathogenic microorganisms found in poorly fermented silage are Escherichia coli, specifically E. coli 0157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes, Bacillus spp., Salmonella and Clostridium spp. Forages can be contaminated with pathogens during one of four points: prior to harvest (manure/compost application to fields), during harvest (contaminated with soil-borne pathogens), silage fermentation (inadequate or sub-optimal) and during feed-out (poor aerobic stability leading to opportunistic pathogen growth).

The impact of contamination at any of these times, can be detrimental to animal health, productivity and overall profitability. Presence of pathogenic microorganisms in silage may lead to digestive upset, enteric disease, poor animal performance and potentially death.

ENTEROBACTERIACEAE—WHAT ARE THEY?

Enterobacteriaceae is the family of Gram-negative bacteria, that includes over 51 genera and 238 species encompassing beneficial commensal microbiota and opportunistic pathogens. Members of the Enterobacteriaceae family include Salmonella, E. coli, Listeria, Shigella and Klebsiella, to name a few. These bacteria are widely distributed in nature, and many species live in the G.I. tract of humans and animals. Unfortunately, some of these bacteria, specifically Salmonella and E.coli are pathogenic and can cause acute enteric disease in both cattle and humans.

SALMONELLA

There are two recognized species within the Salmonella genus: Salmonella enterica and Salmonella bongori. Salmonella enterica can be further divided into 6 subspecies, with Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica being the most relevant in dairy cattle. More than 2,500 serovars or serotypes, differentiated by their antigenic composition, have been identified. Serovars are based on the somatic (O), flagellar (H), and capsular (Vi) antigens. Clinical bovine isolates have been divided by their O antigens, and serovars are further grouped into serogroups assigned to a letter of the alphabet (A, B, C, D, and E). Salmonella isolates are referred to by their serovar/serogroup classification (ex, Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica serovar Typhimurium, is abbreviated to Salmonella Typhimurium).

Despite the diversity of serovars, relatively few are of clinical importance in cattle, these include: Salmonella Typhimurium, S. Newport, S. Cerro and S. Dublin. The majority of cattle isolates are Salmonella of Types B, C, and E, which are non–host specific, or Salmonella Dublin (Type D), which is the host-adapted serovar in cattle. Salmonella is most commonly transmitted by fecal-oral contamination from other livestock, rodents, birds or contaminated feed. Factors that determine the pathogenicity include virulence of serotype, dose of inoculum, degree of immunity, previous exposure and other stressors currently affecting the host. Once ingested, Salmonella attach to mucosal cells and are capable of destroying enterocytes. Attachment is increased if gastrointestinal stasis is present or normal flora has been disturbed or is not yet established.

Enteric, septicemic and reproductive diseases are all possible manifestations of Salmonella infections. During the early stages of the acute enteric disease, affected animals develop fever, dullness, loss of appetite, depressed milk yield and adult pregnant animals may abort. Pneumonia is an increasingly common manifestation of Salmonella Dublin in calves. 

Dairy cows may serve as asymptomatic carriers of Salmonella, thus allowing Salmonella to go undetected until there is an outbreak. The potential for herd carrier status increases with herd size, and Salmonella shedding may be triggered by stress placed on the animals. Salmonella is commonly isolated from the feces of animals that do not show symptoms of salmonellosis. In one study, Salmonella was isolated from 8% of asymptomatic cattle. In another study in the US, 27–31% of dairy farms were found to have cows that shed Salmonella; on these farms between 5.4 to 7.3% of the cattle were found to shed Salmonella. Detecting the presence of Salmonella in a herd, prior to an outbreak, allows the producer to manage mitigation of the pathogen, and reduce the risk of a future outbreak.

ESCHERICHIA COLI

Escherichia coli, more commonly known as E. coli, is a well-known, organism and ubiquitous in nature. While some E. coli is non-pathogenic and part of the normal intestinal microbiota of many animals, Shiga-toxin-producing E. colii (STEC) is pathogenic and a human health concern, primarily as a food-borne pathogen. The majority of cases of STEC infection in humans have been associated with serotype O157:H7, but STEC serogroups O26, O103, O111, and O145 are also significant causes of human diseases. Although STEC does not cause enteric disease in cattle—because cattle do not possess Shigatoxin receptors — it’s important to monitor in cattle due to the food safety and human health concerns.

CLOSTRIDIUM

Clostridia, members of the Clostridiaceae family, are an important component when talking about feed hygiene and GI health. Clostridium are gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacteria that are often found in the soil and manure or in feedstuffs that have been contaminated. Clostridium perfringens can cause a range of diseases with the main concern in lactating cattle being enteric diseases that affect the GI tract. C. perfringens is classified into five Types, A to E, depending on the production of four major toxins (alpha, beta, epsilon, and iota).

С. perfringens becomes pathogenic when stressors increase (feed change, too much starch, pen changes, etc.), and the GI tract creates favorable conditions for proliferation. When elevated levels of the toxins released by C. perfringens enter the bloodstream animals can experience inflammation, shock, cardiac arrest and even death.

WHY WORRY ABOUT ENTEROBACTERIACEAE AND CLOSTRIDIUM IN TMR, MANURE OR WATER?

Evaluating TMR and manure for Enterobacteriaceae and Clostridium provide us with valuable information to have a conversation around both forage inoculants as well as probiotics. Initial efforts by the Chr. Hansen team to quantify and describe hygiene metrics on-farm focused on forages and their impacts on the overall TMR quality and aerobic stability in the feed bunk. Sample analyses and subsequent discussions with dairy owners and managers resulted in adoption of, and stricter adherence to, the Critical Control Points (CCP) for harvest, storage and feed-out, and increased use of SILOSOLVE® silage inoculants. 

Subsequently, this effort extended beyond ensiled forages and the Chr. Hansen inoculant portfolio. A comprehensive hygiene analysis on-farm can be conducted for TMR and water samples, and for quantification of pathogen load in composite manure samples. The TMR and water samples provide a perspective of what the cows may be consuming, while the composite manure samples serve as an indication of the overall GI tract health of cows.

Composite manure samples are more sensitive than individual or pooled samples due to the number of cattle being indirectly sampled. This extension of hygiene analysis and resulting metrics has enhanced the conversation around forage quality and inoculants, but at the same time, elevated the importance of feeding a science-based, research-proven probiotic to every animal, every day. The discussion ultimately culminates with how maintaining a normal GI tract, and normal microbiota significantly reduces the risk of enteric disease and clinical outbreaks. These analyses and, more importantly, the presentation of the resulting metrics, allow Chr. Hansen team members to have discussions with not only the herd owner or manager, but also the nutritionist and consulting veterinarian.

Initial samples (TMR, water and composite manure) should be collected 1 to 7 days prior to feeding a Chr. Hansen probiotic, with follow-up sampling (composite manure) occurring between 30 to 45 days. Additional samples can also be collected at 90 and 180 days but are not required. Results are entered into a visual metric that easily highlights where the sample falls within the excellent, good, average, fair or poor classifications. The TMR metric includes yeast, mold, C. perfringens Type A, Enterobacteria, Vomitoxin, Zearalenone, Aflatoxin and T-2 (Fig. 1a). The water metric includes enumeration of coliforms and E. coli (Fig. 1b), while the composite manure metric includes E. coli STEC, Salmonella sp., Clostridium perfringens, and Clostridium perfringens Type A (Fig 1c).

Figure 1a. Comprehensive Hygiene - TMR, Manure, Water
Figure 1b. Comprehensive Hygiene - TMR, Manure, Water
Figure 1c. Comprehensive Hygiene - TMR, Manure, Water

Results from subsequent manure samples can be compared to previously obtained samples to evaluate if shedding rates have decreased while on the probiotic. Decreases in E. coli STEC, Salmonella sp., Clostridium perfringens and Clostridium perfringens Type A are indicative of improved GI health due to feeding the probiotic. 

For a detailed consultation, please contact AVA Group specialists – together we will find a solution that will make your farm reliable and productive.

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