Poor body condition is associated with lower hippocampal neurogenesis and higher gut methanogen abundance in adult laying hens from two housing systems
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Abstract
It is still unclear which commercial housing system provides the best quality of life for laying hens. In addition, there are large individual differences in stress levels within a system. Hippocampal neurogenesis may provide an integrated biomarker of the stressors experienced by an individual. We selected 12 adult hens each with good and poor body condition (based on body size, degree of feather cover and redness of the comb) from a multi-tier free range system (H&N hens) and an enriched cage system (Hy-Line hens) (n=48). Immature neurons expressing doublecortin (DCX) were quantified in the hippocampus, contents of the caecal microbiome were sequenced, and expression of inflammatory cytokines was measured in the spleen. DCX+ cell densities did not differ between the housing systems. In both systems, poor condition hens had lower DCX+ cell densities, exhibited elevated splenic expression of interleukin-6 (IL6) mRNA, and had a higher relative caecal abundance of methanogenic archea Methanomethylophilaceae. The findings suggest that a greater degree of cumulative chronic stress is experienced by those individuals in the poorest condition, and that a survey of the proportion of hens experiencing poor body condition might be one way to evaluate the impact of housing systems on hen welfare.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
- unpaywall
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License: CC-BY-4.0