Table A3.
Animal-based Measures | Yes/No | 3 Point-Scale |
---|---|---|
Body condition score: is visually assessed on individual goats, using a 3-level scoring method 1: Very thin; 2: Regular; 3: Very fat |
√ | |
Integument cleanliness: 1 (Optimal): the body is clean, any dirt under the hock; 2 (Medium): the body is clean, any dirt on one or more limbs covering part of the area distal to the knee or hock; 3 (Poor): dirt covering the majority of the area below the knee or hock of one or more limbs and some areas of the body |
√ | |
Hair coat lesion: hair loss or skin damage in some body area | √ | |
Severe Lameness: the goat has some difficulty moving forward, not bearing weight on one or more legs, or may ‘goose-step’ high or walk on the knees | √ | |
Udder and teat hygiene: 1: Clean 2: Dirty: any visible udder dirt covering up to one-eighth of the udder surface 3: Very dirty: more than one-eighth of the udder surface is dirty |
√ | |
Qualitative behavior assessment | ||
Aggressive: 1: <5% of animals; 2: 5%–30%of animals; 3: >30% of animals |
√ | |
Relaxed: 1: >30% of animals; 2: <30% of animals |
√ | |
Oblivion: An oblivious goat is defined as an animal, which is physically or mentally isolated from the group. The number of oblivious goats is recorded: 1: 1%–2% of animals; 2: 3%–5% of animals; 3: >5% of animals |
√ | |
Human—Animal relationship tests | ||
Latency to the first contact * 1: >300 s; 2: 120–300 s; 3: <120 s |
√ | |
Animal competition (queuing at feeding and drinking) |
√ | |
Vocalization: The number of goat vocalizations is recorded Yes: >10%, No ≤10% |
√ | |
Stereotypies: Yes: >5%, No ≤5% |
√ |
* Latency to the First Contact.