4.7 Article

The Defeathering Effect by Scalding in Chickens Follows Their Intrinsic Dermal Histologies

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani13162584

Keywords

chickens; scalding; skin histology; collagen denaturation; follicle sheath

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the skin histology and its association with feathers in broilers and native Red-Feather (RF) chickens, as well as the thermal alterations in relation to defeathering by scalding. The results showed that RF chickens had a thicker dermal layer with more collagen deposition and compact architecture, particularly in the neck and abdominal skin. RF chickens also showed specific characteristics in the structure of feather follicles that made them more resistant to thermal changes. The study suggests that the effects of scalding on defeathering depend on the intrinsic skin histologies and the interaction of the feather calamus with the surrounding follicle sheath and neighboring cutaneous tissues, rather than the feathers themselves.
This study aimed to delineate the fundamental skin histology and its association with feathers in broilers and native Red-Feather (RF) chickens and further elucidate their thermal alterations in respect to the defeathering effect by scalding. Comparisons of skin thickness between fresh samples and those after dehydration and fixation, as well as their collagen contents and histological differences, suggested that RF chickens had a thicker dermal layer with more collagen deposition and compact architecture, particularly in the neck and abdominal skin, but a thinner hypodermal layer in the back, chest, and abdomen skin. Despite an adolescent age, RF chickens showed a shorter calamus depth of tail feathers but a larger calamus diameter of wing feathers. Within the feather follicle punch, a very intense follicle sheath layer with compact collagenous matrixes to fulfill the space next to the inner feather root sheath was observed in RF chickens. Under both soft and hard scalding, RF chickens showed a lower degree of denaturation on hip skins and were more resistant to structural disintegration, primarily within the epidermal and dermal layer. Accordingly, a much narrower gap space between the feather sheath and surrounding follicle sheath was observed, and the gap expansion was also resistant to thermal changes. These results suggest that the defeathering effect by scalding follows the intrinsic skin histologies in chickens of various breeds and ages, primarily depending on the interaction of the feather calamus with the surrounding follicle sheath and neighboring cutaneous tissues, reflecting their resistance to thermal denaturation, but is irrelevant to the feathers per se.

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