Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Stress behaviors in cockatiels during and after handling
By Turpen, Katherine K et al.·Published in Journal of avian medicine and surgery·2019·Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Establishing Stress Behaviors in Response to Manual Restraint in Cockatiels ().
- Species:
- bird
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 juvenile cockatiels showed signs of stress during a physical examination that required manual restraint. After being restrained for over 10 minutes, the birds displayed increased inactivity and reduced feeding and interaction with their environment, while their stress hormone levels rose significantly. This study highlights how restraint can affect a cockatiel's behavior, indicating that they experience stress during veterinary visits. Understanding these stress responses can help veterinarians find better ways to handle birds during exams to minimize their anxiety.
People also search for: cockatiel stress signs · how to calm a cockatiel for vet visit · bird behavior after restraint
Abstract
Avian patients are presented commonly to veterinarians for preventive and disease-induced care. Physical examinations commonly are used to assess the overall patient, but this requires manual restraint, which often leads to increased stress and subsequent deleterious effects. To develop a noninvasive evaluation of the stress response in cockatiels (), we evaluated the behavior of 26 juvenile cockatiels during their normal daily routine and after an acute stressful event (manual restraint and physical examination). Nonstressed behavior budgets were established by performing quantitative ethograms using 10-minute focal animal sampling methods with point samples recorded every 5 seconds. The ethograms then were repeated after a >10-minute restraint period for physical examination and venipuncture. Plasma corticosterone levels at baseline (<3 minutes) and after stress (>10 minutes) were compared to accompanying behaviors. Plasma corticosterone levels significantly increased after restraint. Overall, reactionary behaviors and inactivity increased, while locomotion, feeding, interaction with the environment, and displays of aggression decreased in the stressed birds. Maintenance behaviors were not significantly different before and after restraint, but the subjective character changed, with stressed birds displaying an increase in behaviors that were short in duration with minimal decrease in vigilance. Our results will be helpful to develop a method of quantifying stress in companion avian patients by using behavioral indicators. However, further study into specific behaviors of significance is needed.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31124610/