4.7 Article

Characterization of energetic efficiency in adult broiler breeder hens

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 88, Issue 1, Pages 227-235

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3382/ps.2008-00141

Keywords

broiler breeder; energy efficiency; residual feed intake; residual maintenance requirement

Funding

  1. Alberta Livestock Industry Development Fund (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
  2. Aviagen North America Inc. (Huntsville, AL)
  3. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)
  4. Poultry Industry Council (Guelph, Ontario, Canada)
  5. Alberta Chicken Producers (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
  6. Ontario Broiler Chicken Hatching Egg Producers Association (Guelph, Ontario, Canada)
  7. British Columbia Broiler Hatching Eggs Commission (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada)
  8. Lilydale Inc. (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)
  9. Poultry Research Centre (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)

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This trial characterized residual feed intake (RFI) and residual maintenance requirement (RMEm) as measures of energetic efficiency in broiler breeder hens. The RFI was defined as the difference between observed and expected ME intake and RMEm as the difference between observed and expected maintenance requirements. A total of 600 Ross 708 1-d-old pullets were placed in floor pens. At 16 wk, 144 hens were caged and randomly assigned to 1 of 2 feed allocation treatments (72 birds each). The control treatment had feed allocated on a group basis (GRP) following the standard BW target. A second treatment had feed allocated on an individual-bird basis (IND) and followed the same BW target as GRP. Sexual maturity age, egg and chick production, and several feed conversion ratios were correlated to standardized efficiency indices of RFI (SRFI) and RMEm (SRMEm) in each treatment. Greater SRFI and SRMEm values described a greater energetic efficiency. Residual feed intake was more variable in IND than GRP hens (P < 0.001). The variability of RMEm did not differ between treatments (P = 0.14). The SRFI was positively correlated to egg production in the GRP hens (r = 0.31), but negatively correlated in IND hens (r = -0.40) and was correlated to feed conversion per chick only in the GRP-based feed allocation (r = -0.44). The SRMEm correlated strongly to egg production (r = 0.64), chick production (r = 0.64), and feed conversion per chick (r = -0.59) in both feed allocation treatments. Feed intake confounded the RFI calculation, which limits the value of RFI as a selection criterion in meat-producing animals. The independence of RMEm from feed intake is desirable for energetic efficiency assessment in selection programs because consistent values can be obtained across different management schemes. Hens with lower maintenance requirements (greater RMEm efficiency) partitioned more energy toward reproduction than did high-maintenance hens. The RMEm methodology provided an unbiased estimate of energetic efficiency by adjusting the maintenance requirement for the effect of dietary thermogenesis.

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