4.7 Article

Bioimpedance-Measurement-Based Non-Invasive Method for In Ovo Chicken Egg Sexing

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios13040440

Keywords

egg sexing; egg gender; non-invasive; in ovo; bioimpedance

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Day-old male chick culling is a cruel practice in the poultry industry where seven billion male chicks are slaughtered annually. This study introduces a novel non-invasive method using four electrodes and impedance data to determine the gender of chicken eggs. By applying a PCR-based protocol on the eggs at the end of the incubation period, a reliable connection was established between the collected data and the egg's gender, offering a groundbreaking solution to relieve the ethical burden of the poultry industry.
Day-old male chick culling is one of the world's most inhumane problems in the poultry industry. Every year, seven billion male chicks are slaughtered in laying-hen hatcheries due to their higher feed exchange rate, lower management than female chicks, and higher production costs. This study describes a novel non-invasive method for determining the gender of chicken eggs. During the incubation period of fourteen days, four electrodes were attached to each egg for data collection. On the last day of incubation, a standard polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based chicken gender determination protocol was applied to the eggs to obtain the gender information. A relationship was built between the collected data and the egg's gender, and it was discovered to have a reliable connection, indicating that the chicken egg gender can be determined by measuring the impedance data of the eggs on day 9 of incubation with the four electrodes set and using the self-normalization technique. This is a groundbreaking discovery, demonstrating that impedance spectroscopy can be used to sex chicken eggs before they hatch, relieving the poultry industry of such an ethical burden.

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