Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens

In on-farm hatching systems, eggs that have been incubated for 18 D are transported to the broiler farm. After hatching around day 21, the chicks have immediate access to feed and water. By contrast, traditionally hatched chicks are in early life exposed to dust and pathogens in the hatcher, handling procedures, and transport and remain without feed and water until they have arrived on the farm 1 to 3 D after hatching. We compared welfare and performance of on-farm hatched (OH) and traditionally hatched control (C) Ross 308 broiler chickens from day 0 to 40, housed under semicommercial conditions. The experiment included 3 production cycles in 4 rooms, with each room containing 1 OH and 1 C pen with 1,150 chickens in each pen. Per cycle, C and OH chicks were from the same batch of eggs of 1 parent stock flock. Day-old chick quality was worse for OH than C chickens (hock and navel score; P < 0.05). On-farm hatched chickens were heavier than C chickens until day 21 of age (P < 0.05). Total mortality was significantly lower in OH compared with C pens (P < 0.05). A tendency for lower footpad dermatitis scores was found in OH pens compared with C pens (P < 0.10), probably because of the dryer litter in OH than C pens (P < 0.05). No differences between treatments were found in gait, hock burn, cleanliness, and injury scores, and no or only minor, short lasting differences were found in pathology and intestinal histology. In conclusion, the present study showed that on-farm hatching may be beneficial for broiler welfare, as it reduced total mortality and resulted in dryer litter which is known to be beneficial for reducing footpad dermatitis.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: de Jong, Ingrid C., van Hattum, Theo, van Riel, Johan W., De Baere, Kris, Kempen, Ine, Cardinaels, Sofie, Gunnink, Henk
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:broiler, health, on-farm hatching, production, welfare,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-on-farm-and-traditional-hatching-on-welfare-health-and
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-569119
record_format koha
spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5691192024-10-02 de Jong, Ingrid C. van Hattum, Theo van Riel, Johan W. De Baere, Kris Kempen, Ine Cardinaels, Sofie Gunnink, Henk Article/Letter to editor Poultry Science 99 (2020) 10 ISSN: 0032-5791 Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens 2020 In on-farm hatching systems, eggs that have been incubated for 18 D are transported to the broiler farm. After hatching around day 21, the chicks have immediate access to feed and water. By contrast, traditionally hatched chicks are in early life exposed to dust and pathogens in the hatcher, handling procedures, and transport and remain without feed and water until they have arrived on the farm 1 to 3 D after hatching. We compared welfare and performance of on-farm hatched (OH) and traditionally hatched control (C) Ross 308 broiler chickens from day 0 to 40, housed under semicommercial conditions. The experiment included 3 production cycles in 4 rooms, with each room containing 1 OH and 1 C pen with 1,150 chickens in each pen. Per cycle, C and OH chicks were from the same batch of eggs of 1 parent stock flock. Day-old chick quality was worse for OH than C chickens (hock and navel score; P < 0.05). On-farm hatched chickens were heavier than C chickens until day 21 of age (P < 0.05). Total mortality was significantly lower in OH compared with C pens (P < 0.05). A tendency for lower footpad dermatitis scores was found in OH pens compared with C pens (P < 0.10), probably because of the dryer litter in OH than C pens (P < 0.05). No differences between treatments were found in gait, hock burn, cleanliness, and injury scores, and no or only minor, short lasting differences were found in pathology and intestinal histology. In conclusion, the present study showed that on-farm hatching may be beneficial for broiler welfare, as it reduced total mortality and resulted in dryer litter which is known to be beneficial for reducing footpad dermatitis. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-on-farm-and-traditional-hatching-on-welfare-health-and 10.1016/j.psj.2020.06.052 https://edepot.wur.nl/530264 broiler health on-farm hatching production welfare https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
spellingShingle broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
de Jong, Ingrid C.
van Hattum, Theo
van Riel, Johan W.
De Baere, Kris
Kempen, Ine
Cardinaels, Sofie
Gunnink, Henk
Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
description In on-farm hatching systems, eggs that have been incubated for 18 D are transported to the broiler farm. After hatching around day 21, the chicks have immediate access to feed and water. By contrast, traditionally hatched chicks are in early life exposed to dust and pathogens in the hatcher, handling procedures, and transport and remain without feed and water until they have arrived on the farm 1 to 3 D after hatching. We compared welfare and performance of on-farm hatched (OH) and traditionally hatched control (C) Ross 308 broiler chickens from day 0 to 40, housed under semicommercial conditions. The experiment included 3 production cycles in 4 rooms, with each room containing 1 OH and 1 C pen with 1,150 chickens in each pen. Per cycle, C and OH chicks were from the same batch of eggs of 1 parent stock flock. Day-old chick quality was worse for OH than C chickens (hock and navel score; P < 0.05). On-farm hatched chickens were heavier than C chickens until day 21 of age (P < 0.05). Total mortality was significantly lower in OH compared with C pens (P < 0.05). A tendency for lower footpad dermatitis scores was found in OH pens compared with C pens (P < 0.10), probably because of the dryer litter in OH than C pens (P < 0.05). No differences between treatments were found in gait, hock burn, cleanliness, and injury scores, and no or only minor, short lasting differences were found in pathology and intestinal histology. In conclusion, the present study showed that on-farm hatching may be beneficial for broiler welfare, as it reduced total mortality and resulted in dryer litter which is known to be beneficial for reducing footpad dermatitis.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
author de Jong, Ingrid C.
van Hattum, Theo
van Riel, Johan W.
De Baere, Kris
Kempen, Ine
Cardinaels, Sofie
Gunnink, Henk
author_facet de Jong, Ingrid C.
van Hattum, Theo
van Riel, Johan W.
De Baere, Kris
Kempen, Ine
Cardinaels, Sofie
Gunnink, Henk
author_sort de Jong, Ingrid C.
title Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
title_short Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
title_full Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
title_fullStr Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
title_sort effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effects-of-on-farm-and-traditional-hatching-on-welfare-health-and
work_keys_str_mv AT dejongingridc effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT vanhattumtheo effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT vanrieljohanw effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT debaerekris effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT kempenine effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT cardinaelssofie effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
AT gunninkhenk effectsofonfarmandtraditionalhatchingonwelfarehealthandperformanceofbroilerchickens
_version_ 1813196279353704448