Friendly faces calm stressed sheep
Helen
Pilcher
Picture therapy could soothe lonely bleaters
August 24, 2004
Exposing isolated sheep to photos of other sheep
lowers their stress levels, shows a recent study. Researchers suggest the
practice could be used to soothe solitary and sick animals and hope the work
will help elucidate the brain mechanisms behind the ability to link faces with
emotion.
Like many of us, sheep do not like being alone.
They are also excellent at recognizing individual faces, and can remember the
features of up to 50 sheep and 10 humans over a two-year period1.
So Keith Kendrick and colleagues from the
Babraham Institute in Cambridge, UK, wondered if photos of sheep faces could be
used to appease lonely bleaters. Their findings are reported in the Proceedings
of the Royal Society of London B2.
Telling the sheep from the goats
The team took 40 sheep of a Welsh lowland breed
called Clun Forest, and isolated them one at a time in a funnel-shaped
enclosure. For the first 15 minutes, four identical pictures of a white inverted
triangle were projected on to the rear wall. For the next 15 minutes, the
animals were shown either four photos of an unfamiliar sheep face or four photos
of an unknown goat face.
As soon as the animals were left alone, their
heart rates began to soar. At the end of the first 15 minutes, adrenalin and
stress hormone levels had increased, indicating clear signs of stress.