4.7 Article

Welfare and performance of slower growing broiler breeders during rearing

期刊

POULTRY SCIENCE
卷 100, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2021.101434

关键词

slow-growing chicken; broiler; feed efficiency; feed restriction; genetics

资金

  1. Canadian Hatching Eggs Producers
  2. Mitacs Accelerate Fellowship
  3. Canada First Research Excellence Fund
  4. Ontario Agri-Food Innovation Alliance

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Commercial strains of broiler breeders require feed restriction for optimal reproductive performance, but it poses welfare concerns. Research on slower growing broiler breeders showed that faster growing strains exhibited higher feed intake, earlier feed restriction, and more footpad lesions. Slower growing strains may still need some feed restriction for growth control, with lower restriction levels associated with fewer signs of feeding frustration and better body weight uniformity.
Current commercial strains of broiler breeders can only achieve an optimal reproductive performance under feed restriction. However, chronic feed restriction in broiler breeders is a welfare concern because of physiological and behavioral signs of hunger, lack of satiety, and frustrated feeding motivation. The objective of this research was to assess the welfare and performance of slower growing broiler breeders during rearing. A total of 360 broiler breeder chicks from 3 female strains (100 chicks per strain) and 2 male strains (20 and 40 chicks per strain) were raised in four identical pens per strain. Strain B and C pullets and X cockerels were slower growing strains, and strain A pullets and Y cockerels were intermediate growing strains. Birds were weighed and scored individually for footpad lesions, hock burns and feather coverage. Data were analyzed using generalized linear mixed models with pen nested in the models and age as a repeated measure. Compared to B and C pullets, strain A pullets grew faster, had poorer body weight uniformity, and started feed restriction 2 wk earlier to control growth rate. Strain A pullets also had higher feeding rate at 3 and 5 wk, higher water intake at 4 and 5 wk, and higher prevalence of footpad lesions at 6 wk than the other pullet strains. Fault bars in wing feathers (an indicator of chronic stress) were more numerous in A pullets than in B and C pullets. Our results indicate that pullets showed little feather coverage loss during early rearing and had good body weight uniformity and low cumulative feed intake at the end of rearing. Slower growing broiler breeders may still require some degree of feed restriction to control growth rate, and strains with lower feed restriction exhibited lower signs of feeding frustration and high body weight uniformity.

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