Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Area/Location of Study
2.2. Schematic Overview of the Experimental Program
2.3. Ethical Approval
2.4. Research Visits and Sample Size Determination
2.5. Development and Validation of Research Instrument
2.6. Administration of Research Instrument
2.7. Elaboration of Questionnaire Parameters
2.7.1. Pathways to Determine the Slaughter Conditions
2.7.2. Pregnancy Status of the Selected Slaughtered Cows
2.7.3. Estimated Loses of Beef from Slaughtered Pregnant Cows (SPCs)
2.8. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Establishing the Pathway of Slaughter Conditions/Welfare
3.2. Reasons for Sale or Slaughter of Pregnant Cows
3.3. Distribution of Pregnant Cows Slaughtered
3.4. Method of Disposal of Eviscerated Foetuses
3.5. Estimated Economic Losses of SPCs
4. Discussion
5. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Positive Cattle Welfare Condition | Negative Cattle Welfare Condition | Way-Outs/Remarks |
---|---|---|
CATTLE ENVIRONMENT AT THE LAIRAGE | ||
* Adequate shelter at the lairage | * No shelter, marshy or water-logged floor | Provision of shelter, adequate floor space, feed/water and conducive environment at the holding pen/lairage; to limit overcrowding, stress, fighting and hence injuries and lacerations |
** Moderate stocking density and hence adequate floor space | ** Overcrowded or high stocking density | |
** Absence of wounds, lacerations or fight injury | ** Presence of wounds, lacerations and injuries/fractures due to fighting caused by overstocking or starvation/thirst | |
** Ability to express innate abilities like mooing, jumping, etc | ** Depressed, afraid, in a state of pain and hence unable to express innate abilities | |
PRE-SLAUGHTER CATTLE CONDITION | ||
** No slipping or falling ** No hitting or mal-handling ** No dragging to the kill floor ** No vocalisation/groaning during handling | ** Dragging, hitting, falling, groaning, etc during pre-slaughter handling | Training and retraining on pre-slaughter human handling. Mechanisation of slaughter and processing processed to limit excessive use of force or manual labour. Enactment and or strict implementation of human animal handling before and during slaughter. |
DURING SLAUGHTER OF CATTLE | ||
** Stunning prior to bleed | ** No stunning prior to bleeding | Training and retraining on modern and human slaughter practices. Mechanisation of slaughter and processing processed to limit excessive use of force or manual labour. Provision of modern slaughter facilities to automate slaughter process and limit meat contamination. Enactment and or strict implementation of human animal handling before and during slaughter. |
** Stunning to bleeding interval of less than 5 s | ** Stunning to bleeding interval of ≥ 5 s | |
** No dropping, throwing or hoisting during the slaughter | ** Dropping, throwing or hoisting during the slaughter | |
** All animals successfully stunned (were rendered unconscious) at the first attempt. | ** No or few animals successfully stunned (were rendered unconscious) at the first attempt | |
** No vocalisation/groaning during stunning or bleeding | ** Vocalisation/groaning during stunning or bleeding |
Reasons/Causes | Number (%) of Respondents | ||
---|---|---|---|
Yes | No | No Response | |
High demand for beef | 73 (61.3) | 21 (17.6) | 25 (21.0) |
Economic hardship | 62 (52.1) | 57 (47.9) | 0 |
Ignorance of the pregnancy status of the animal | 83 (69.7) | 32 (26.9) | 4 (3.4) |
Preference for pregnant cows because of size | 57 (47.9) | 46 (38.7) | 16 (13.4) |
Feed scarcity during dry seasons | 32 (26.9) | 87 (73.1) | 0 |
Disease conditions | 51 (42.9) | 42 (35.3) | 26 (21.8) |
Variables | Number (%) of Cows Slaughtered | Number (%) of Pregnant Cows Slaughtered | Prevalence | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
AGE | ||||
<4 years | 126 (14.8) | 30 (23.8) | 20.3 | 0.029 * |
4–8 years | 498 (58.5) | 89 (17.8) | 60.1 | |
>8 years | 227 (26.7) | 29 (12.8) | 19.6 | |
SEASON | ||||
Wet | 418 (49.1) | 61 (14.6) | 41.2 | 0.038 * |
Dry | 433 (50.9) | 87 (20.1) | 58.8 | |
BREED | ||||
White Fulani | 621 (72.9) | 119 (19.2) | 80.4 | 0.149 |
Sokoto gudali | 130 (15.3) | 18 (13.8) | 12.2 | |
Red bororo | 63 (7.4) | 7 (11.1) | 4.7 | |
Mixed breeds | 37 (4.3) | 4 (10.8) | 2.7 |
Variables | Number (%) of Cows Slaughtered | Number (%) of Pregnant Cows Slaughtered | Prevalence | p-Values |
---|---|---|---|---|
MONTHS | ||||
December | 197 (23.1) | 51 (25.9) | 34.5 | 0.021 * |
January | 157 (18.4) | 24 (15.3) | 16.2 | |
February | 129 (15.2) | 21 (16.3) | 14.2 | |
July | 118 (13.9) | 17 (14.4) | 11.5 | |
August | 121 (14.2) | 16 (13.2) | 10.8 | |
September | 129 (15.2) | 19 (14.7) | 12.8 | |
SLAUGHTER LOCATIONS | ||||
Enugu | 327 (38.4) | 57 (17.4) | 38.5 | 0.406 |
Nsukka | 315 (37.0) | 49 (15.6) | 33.1 | |
Awka | 209 (24.6) | 42 (20.1) | 28.4 |
Variables | Number (%) of Foetuses |
---|---|
AGE | |
First trimester | 33 (22.3) |
Second trimester | 51 (34.5) |
Third trimester | 64 (43.2) |
SEX | |
Male | 82 (55.4) |
Female | 66 (44.5) |
Method of Foetus Disposal * | Number (%) of YES Respondents |
---|---|
Sold foetuses for human consumption | 21 (17.6) |
Sold foetuses for preparation of dog food | 33 (27.7) |
Sold eviscerated foetus for feeding of fishes or pigs | 28 (23.5) |
Dumped unsold foetus or gravid uterine contents in municipal refuse dump | 65 (54.6) |
Incinerated unsold foetus or gravid uterine tissues | 4 (3.4) |
Buried unsold foetus or gravid uterine contents | 7 (5.9) |
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Njoga, U.J.; Njoga, E.O.; Nwobi, O.C.; Abonyi, F.O.; Edeh, H.O.; Ajibo, F.E.; Azor, N.; Bello, A.; Upadhyay, A.K.; Okpala, C.O.R.; et al. Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security. Foods 2021, 10, 1298. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298
Njoga UJ, Njoga EO, Nwobi OC, Abonyi FO, Edeh HO, Ajibo FE, Azor N, Bello A, Upadhyay AK, Okpala COR, et al. Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security. Foods. 2021; 10(6):1298. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298
Chicago/Turabian StyleNjoga, Ugochinyere J., Emmanuel O. Njoga, Obichukwu C. Nwobi, Festus O. Abonyi, Henry O. Edeh, Festus E. Ajibo, Nichodemus Azor, Abubakar Bello, Anjani K. Upadhyay, Charles Odilichukwu R. Okpala, and et al. 2021. "Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security" Foods 10, no. 6: 1298. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298
APA StyleNjoga, U. J., Njoga, E. O., Nwobi, O. C., Abonyi, F. O., Edeh, H. O., Ajibo, F. E., Azor, N., Bello, A., Upadhyay, A. K., Okpala, C. O. R., Korzeniowska, M., & Guiné, R. P. F. (2021). Slaughter Conditions and Slaughtering of Pregnant Cows in Southeast Nigeria: Implications to Meat Quality, Food Safety and Security. Foods, 10(6), 1298. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10061298