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The
bird pictured is a real New Zealand battery hen. Although
she is badly defeathered, hens like her are a common sight
on battery farms.
Statistics
· 2.4 million battery hens are farmed each year.
· 95% of all layer hens are battery hens.
· They produce over 60 million dozen eggs per year.
· People consume 200 eggs on average per year.
· There are approximately 130 egg producers in New Zealand.
· 20% of these account for 50% of the total egg production.
· Due to selective breeding each hen lays about 310 eggs
per year.
· Her wild ancestor, the junglefowl, would lay 10 to 20 eggs
per year.
The
Battery Cage
· Each bird has just 450 sq cm of living space (less space
than an A4 sheet of paper).
· The wire (sometimes plastic) floor is sloped to allow the
eggs to roll forward for easy collection.
· A battery hen can't peck and scratch or dust bathe.
· She can't walk.
· She can't even stretch her wings.
· She is denied fresh air and sunlight.
Inflicted
Cruelty
· Most battery hens are debeaked when they are just five
days old.
· Debeaking involves searing off the end of a chicken's beak
with a red-hot blade.
· This procedure is carried out to reduce the effects of
cannibalism, caused by overcrowding and stressful living conditions.
· Debeaking can cause lifelong pain, and impair the hen's
ability to eat normally.
· Some hens have their middle toe cut off to minimise foot
injuries.
· Because male birds don't lay eggs, 50% of all one-day-old
chicks are killed by gassing or instantaneous fragmentation.
Welfare
Problems
· Stress and boredom from the barren and cramped living environment.
· Foot and claw problems due to the sloping wire floor.
· Loss of feathers and skin damage from rubbing against the
cage and pecking from cage-mates.
· Fatty liver haemorrhagic syndrome can occur due to stress
and lack of exercise, causing death from rupture of the liver.
· Bone weakness (osteoporosis), due to lack of exercise and
depleted calcium levels resulting from the unnaturally high number
of eggs laid - eggshells are made of calcium and a hen now lays
310 eggs per year, instead of the normal 10 to 20.
Slaughter
· Battery hens are killed at 18 months.
· Their normal life span is 10-15 years.
· Overseas research shows that battery hens often have broken
bones by the time they are killed, due to weak bones combined with
rough handling during transportation.
· Their meat is used for pet food and food flavouring.
There has to be a better way!
There is!
· Free range - The hens have access to the outdoors 24 hours
a day, with indoor areas for egg laying and perching space. Most
of the hens' natural behavioural needs are met as they can dust
bathe, peck and scratch, and forage for food outside in a spacious
natural environment. Most free-range farmers blunt their hens' beaks.
Free-range hens are killed at 18 months.
· Barn - The hens are all housed indoors at around seven
birds per square metre, with no access to the outdoors. They are
able to dust bathe, peck and scratch, and forage for food on the
floor of the barn, which is covered with wood shavings. The hens
lay eggs in nesting boxes and sleep on a raised, slatted platform.
Most barn hens are beak blunted, and are killed at 18 months.
· RNZSPCA accredited eggs are available from all good supermarkets.
We accredit both barn and free range egg producers, who must
meet stringent welfare standards and undergo annual audits. For
further information visit our RNZSPCA Approved Eggs & Pork page here.
In
Other Countries
· Switzerland banned the battery cage in 1992.
· The European Union will phase out the battery hen cage
by 2012
Click to go back to Battery Cages Campaign.
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