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, handlin...

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Main Authors: Ingrid C. de Jong, Theo van Hattum, Johan W. van Riel, Kris De Baere, Ine Kempen, Sofie Cardinaels, Henk Gunnink
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:Poultry Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S003257912030417X
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spelling doaj-7ce4039ba9ab4e13abf5e911fc7630e42020-11-25T03:17:47ZengElsevierPoultry Science0032-57912020-10-01991046624671Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickensIngrid C. de Jong0Theo van Hattum1Johan W. van Riel2Kris De Baere3Ine Kempen4Sofie Cardinaels5Henk Gunnink6Wageningen Livestock Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, The Netherlands; Corresponding author:Wageningen Livestock Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, The NetherlandsWageningen Livestock Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, The NetherlandsExperimental Poultry Centre, Province of Antwerp, 2440 Geel, BelgiumExperimental Poultry Centre, Province of Antwerp, 2440 Geel, BelgiumExperimental Poultry Centre, Province of Antwerp, 2440 Geel, BelgiumWageningen Livestock Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, The NetherlandsIn 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.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S003257912030417Xbroilerhealthon-farm hatchingproductionwelfare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ingrid C. de Jong
Theo van Hattum
Johan W. van Riel
Kris De Baere
Ine Kempen
Sofie Cardinaels
Henk Gunnink
spellingShingle Ingrid C. de Jong
Theo van Hattum
Johan W. van Riel
Kris De Baere
Ine Kempen
Sofie Cardinaels
Henk Gunnink
Effects of on-farm and traditional hatching on welfare, health, and performance of broiler chickens
Poultry Science
broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
author_facet Ingrid C. de Jong
Theo van Hattum
Johan W. van Riel
Kris De Baere
Ine Kempen
Sofie Cardinaels
Henk Gunnink
author_sort Ingrid C. de Jong
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
publisher Elsevier
series Poultry Science
issn 0032-5791
publishDate 2020-10-01
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.
topic broiler
health
on-farm hatching
production
welfare
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S003257912030417X
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