ORCID
- Katherine A. Herborn: 0000-0002-5913-7912
- Sarah A. Collins: 0000-0002-0539-7241
Abstract
Social signals about current environmental risks can shape development in young animals. Distress calls made by young chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) may also encode affective state, with high arousal, potentially ‘anxiety-like’ state characterized by continuous calling, and learned helplessness or potentially ‘depression-like’ state by a more intermittent pattern. During early life (age 4–7 days), we played chicks artificial stimuli mimicking these two call patterns. Growth effects suggest caller affective state can modulate this social signal: chicks exposed to bouts of ‘Continuous’ calls grew faster and were heavier by late commercial life (day 43) than Controls. In contrast, chicks exposed to ‘Intermittent’ calling showed slow, then compensatory, growth. A third experimental treatment with similar ‘noisiness’ to distress calls did not influence growth. Responses to a late-life social isolation trial suggested lasting impacts on stressor perception or resilience. Comb temperature elevation during isolation, indicating acute stress, was greatest in the Continuous group. Call rate decline during isolation, potentially indicating a tendency towards learned helplessness, was steep in all three experimental treatments; hence, noise-related disturbance from vocalizations may also shape development. Distress calls are consequently an important consideration in farms, where young are raised at high density and one individual is heard by many.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2026-01-21
Publication Title
Biology Letters
Volume
22
Issue
1
ISSN
1744-9561
Acceptance Date
2025-11-11
Deposit Date
2026-01-26
Funding
This project was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council with the grant number BB/N010361/1.
Additional Links
Keywords
emotional contagion, developmental plasticity, social signals, animal welfare, early-life effects, affective state
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Herborn, K., Wilson, B., Collins, S., Mitchell, M., McElligott, A., & Asher, L. (2026) 'Distress calls as social stressors affecting chicken welfare', Biology Letters, 22(1). Available at: 10.1098/rsbl.2025.0534
