4.7 Article

Short cold exposures during incubation and postnatal cold temperature affect performance, breast meat quality, and welfare parameters in broiler chickens

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 99, Issue 2, Pages 857-868

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2019.10.024

Keywords

broiler; incubation; meat quality; white striping; welfare

Funding

  1. West Africa Agricultural Productivity Program from Togo (WAAPP-Togo)
  2. CERSA (Centre d'Excellence Regional sur les Sciences Aviaires, Lome University)
  3. INRAE (Department Animal Physiology and Livestock Systems, Eval_Adapt project)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cold stimulations during egg incubation were reported to limit the occurrence of ascites in broilers subjected to cold temperature after 14 d of age. However, data are lacking on the impacts of such strategy in case of cold temperature conditions at start. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of incubation and posthatch cold challenge on performance, breast muscle integrity, and meat processing quality in broiler chickens. Ross 308 eggs were incubated under control temperature (I-0, 37.6 degrees C) or subjected to 15 degrees C during 30 min on day 18 and 19 of incubation (I-1). Chicks from each group were reared in floor pens either at standard rearing temperature (T-0), from 32 degrees C at 0 d to 21 degrees C at 21 d of age, or exposed to colder rearing temperature (T-1), from 29 degrees C at 0 to 21 degrees C at 21 d of age. All birds were then kept at 21 degrees C until slaughter (day 40), when body weights (BW), feed conversion ratio (FCR), breast muscle yield, meat processing quality, and the occurrences of meat defects, hock burns, and pododermatitis were recorded. No significant impact of incubation conditions on hatchability was observed. At day 40, BW was more under T-1 than under T-0 conditions, with T-0 females (but not males) presenting more BW after I-1 than after I-0 conditions. In the whole period, T-1 chickens presented lower FCR than T-0 chickens and higher breast meat yields at day 40. The occurrence of white striping was more in I1T1 males than in all other groups, except for the I0T1 males. Hock burns were more frequent in I1T1 males than in all females and I0T0 males, whereas the occurrence of pododermatitis was lower in T-0 males than in other groups. Despite some positive effects of I-1 incubation on growth after starting under low ambient temperature, this study reveals the limits of such strategy concerning chicken health and welfare, demonstrating that early thermal environment is a major component of the quality and sustainability of chicken meat production.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available