equid assessment, research and scoping (ears): the development and implementation of a new equid welfare assessment and monitoring tool
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2020
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Abstract
The assessment of animal welfare poses numerous challenges, yet an emerging approach is the consolidation of existing knowledge into new frameworks which can offer standardised approaches to welfare assessment across a variety of contexts. Multiple tools exist for measuring the welfare of equids, but such tools have typically been developed for specific contexts. There is no ‘one size fits all’ which means that resulting datasets are generally non-comparable, creating a barrier to knowledge-sharing and collaboration between the many organisations working to improve equid welfare around the globe. To address this, we developed the Equid Assessment, Research and Scoping (EARS) tool, which incorporates pre-existing validated welfare assessment methods alongside new welfare indicators to deliver a larger and more comprehensive series of welfare indicators than currently exists, creating a single resource that can be used to assess equid welfare in any context. We field-trialled three welfare assessment protocols within the EARS tool, and applied these to welfare assessment of equids in a variety of contexts across nineteen countries. The EARS tool proved a useful, versatile and rapid method for collecting welfare assessment data and we collected 7464 welfare assessments in a period of fifteen months. We evaluate the EARS tool and provide ideas for future development.
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raw2020animalsequid
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| Authors | ;Zoe Raw;Joao B. Rodrigues;Karen Rickards;Joe Ryding;Stuart L. Norris;Andrew Judge;Laura M. Kubasiewicz;Tamlin L. Watson;Holly Little;Ben Hart;Rebekah Sullivan;Chris Garrett;Faith A. Burden |
| Journal | translational oncology |
| Year | 2020 |
| DOI |
10.3390/ani10020297
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