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Summary Lecture Notes Introduction to Animal Sciences | Wageningen University | 2025/26

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Lecture notes from YAS10306 Introduction to Animal Sciences at Wageningen University covering the fundamentals of animal domestication and husbandry. Topics include domestication criteria, reasons for animal keeping, meat and fish consumption patterns, religious food laws (halal, kosher, vegetarianism), and animal welfare factors including housing, nutrition, health, and enrichment strategies. Essential for understanding core concepts in animal sciences and useful for exam preparation, with clear explanations of both biological and cultural aspects of animal agriculture.

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Reasons for keeping and raising animals
History
 An animal species must meet the following criteria in order to have
been domesticated:
o Flexible diet: animal species that consume a wide variety of
foods, in particular food sources that cannot be consumed by
humans
o Reproductive and/or utilizable age rapidly reached (relative to
human lifetime)
o Reproduction possible in captivitiy
o Docile (non-aggressive) character
o Do not panic easily: e.g. deer display much flight behaviour and
can run themselves to death in response to panic/stress, which
makes them less domesticable
o Acceptance of humans as potential leaders/dominant individuals
Functions of animal keeping
Keeping animals for food
 Is one of the main reasons
 Differences in consumption of fish and meat between countries are
large
 FAO = Food agriculture organization
 GDP = Gross Domestic product, is used for: is a measure of the
economy of a country and is calculated as the total production of
economic goods and services, including product used in the country
itself
 Meat consumption within a nation increases with increasing GDP 
makes meat consumption generally a good estimation for the
economic development of a country
 Fish is more likely to be consumed in countries with a low GDP,
especially if those countries have sea shores
 The large variation in the fish/meat consumption ratio between
countries with a low GDP is caused by the availability of the protein
sources in a country
Keeping animals for meat
 Slaughter  stunning = to render unconscious during slaughter
(electrical, gaseous, mechanical)
 Slaughter in fish:
o Most commercially-caught wild: die from suffocation (+ ice) (+
evisceration)
o Humane methods include: percussive stunning, spiking
 Prok is clearly the preferred meat in the Netherlands and Europe, but
it is almost equally preferred to poultry meat

,  Lamb:
o The dutch consume verry little lamb: 1,4kg/person/year
o Most lamp is exported to Belgium, Italy, France and Germany
o Same counts for veal
o ‘food laws’: describe the diets of people following specific
religions.
 Buddhism:
o Considers living beings to be sacred, a belief that has translated
into widely practiced vegetarianism and veganism
o Avoid all foods related to processes where harm was done
 Christianity:
o The food regulations differs from different groups
o Some fasting days
 Hinduism:
o Meat was originally prohibited, many hindus today regared
vegetarianism as a way to maintain the respect observed for life
o They avoid the killing of any animal, the cleansing of those
involved in food preparation, which is a reflection on previously
existing caste-restriced
 Islam:
o Involve specific rituals slaughtering procedures for animals of
consumption (haram)  halal
o Fasting
o Most foods are halal while the list of haram foods includes pork,
alcohol and any products that may contain emulsifiers made from
animal fats
 Rastafari movement:
o Most are vegetarian of vegan
o Foods that may be consumed are called ital: are characterised by
having no artificial colours, flavours or preservatives, hence being
considered pure or natural
o Avoid the consumption of alcohol and in some cases also tea,
coffee and other caffeinated drinks
 Judaism:
o Kosher (allowed) or trefa (forbidden)
o Kosher foods include animals that have a completely split hoof
and hew cud (such as cows, goats and sheeps)
o Fish must have fins an scales
o A specific slaughtering process must be followed for meat to be
considered kosher
 Pork:
o Pork is produced by crossing 4 pure meat breeds
o Litters comprise of 12.6 live piglets on average, a sow gives birth
an average of 2,36 times and produces 28=9.8 piglets every year

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