The relationship between body weight and reproductive efficiency in meat-type chickens
1993
Robinson, F.E. | Wilson, J.L. | Yu, M.W. | Fasenko, G.M. | Hardin, R.T.
With improvements in growth rate of broiler chickens, the ability of meat-type parent stocks to reproduce has been severely reduced. Broiler breeder chickens require dedicated programs of feed restriction to maximize egg production and chick production. The production of settable eggs is limited by poor shell quality as a result of a lack of coordination of the shell calcification process, and by a high incidence of multiple-yolked eggs. The erratic nature of oviposition in full-fed hens, evidenced by multiple ovipositions in a 24-h period and by ovipositions occurring during the dark period, indicates that such hens do not abide by the principles of the ovulatory cycle that are accepted for egg-type hens. Fertility is reduced in overweight broiler breeders due to reduced mating success (which limits sperm transfer to the female), by a reduction in the duration of fertility, and possibly by impaired sperm transport to the site of fertilization (because the normal passage of developing eggs is more random than in egg-type hens). Fertility can also be poor due to problems with the male, including reductions in semen production and libido as well as poor physical coordination. Embryonic mortality is high in the eggs of overweight hens, as such eggs are often poorly calcified, which results in increased shell porosity and egg weight loss. Overweight hens exhibit short laying sequences and may also have poor overall chick production due to an increased incidence of first-of-sequence eggs, which have been demonstrated to exhibit an increased incidence of embryonic mortality.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Palabras clave de AGROVOC
Información bibliográfica
Este registro bibliográfico ha sido proporcionado por National Agricultural Library