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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You are an animal behaviorist for a large agricultural consortium. The company informs you that your analytical skills are required at one of their newly acquired pig farms. They tell you that the pigs on this farm are not reaching their desired weight in time for the market, and therefore are not reaching their full production value.

"Animal behaviorists are brought in to consult on the different ways to control or change the behavior of animals, or as the industry calls it, 'domestic animal management,'" says animal behaviorist Wayne Goodey.

In order to solve this mystery, you have to do some research. According to Goodey, "Animal behaviorists do not work in a vacuum and their findings are usually built upon previous work" from others in their field.

From your research, you learn there are numerous reasons why pigs might lose weight. The pigs are biting each other, thus getting sick due to infections caused by the scrapes; the pigs cannot digest the chemicals or preservatives in the feed; or tougher pigs are preventing the weaker pigs from eating sufficiently. The pigs may be constantly fighting, the stress of which causes them to lose weight.

With research in hand, you are prepared to identify what the problem is and why it is occurring.

The farm manager shows you to the pigpen. You spend hours observing the pigs in their environment. They are not showing any signs of behavior that might cause them to lose weight. The pigs are not fighting; they are eating well and resting well. You cannot find a reason why the pigs are not gaining their appropriate weight.

From your experience and by analyzing past research on this topic, you suspect that something in the feed is causing the pigs not to digest their food properly. "Even though the pigs are swallowing the food they need, the pigs are not digesting the nutrients completely due to their physiology being incompatible with kinds of chemicals in the feed," says Goodey.

To find out for sure if this is causing the pigs to lose weight, you will have to experiment on the animals. You will have to get someone to take biopsies of tissues and do blood tests to see if there are any foreign chemicals in their system (which might prevent them from digesting their feed properly).

The manager doesn't want you to take samples from the pigs. He finds that your methods are intrusive and might damage the product. Without the blood tests and the biopsies, you cannot rule out the feed as the contaminant that is causing the pigs to lose weight. If a pig dies while you are completing your study, the manager says he will hold you personally responsible for the loss.

What do you do?