Plumage condition and health of aviary-kept hens fed mash or crumbled pellets
In the present experiment, we evaluated the effects on plumage condition and health of feeding a mash or a crumbled diet to two hybrids of laying hens in an aviary system. The two diets had the same composition and calculated nutrient content. A total of 3,204 birds was studied from 20 to 80 wk of a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Poultry science 2001-03, Vol.80 (3), p.266-271 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In the present experiment, we evaluated the effects on plumage condition and health of feeding a mash or a crumbled diet to two hybrids of laying hens in an aviary system. The two diets had the same composition and calculated nutrient content. A total of 3,204 birds was studied from 20 to 80 wk of age. Two hybrids, Lohmann Selected Leghorn and SLU-1329 (two line crosses of Leghorn and Rhode Island Red), were housed in six pens each of an aviary system with groups of 269 and 265 birds, respectively. There were three replicates per treatment (diet x hybrid). Diet generally had little effect on plumage condition, health, and tonic immobility. However, birds fed the crumbled diet had significantly fewer problems with bumble foot than those fed the mash diet. Hybrids reacted differently in most traits studied; SLU-1329 had better health scores but more problems with cannibalism and salpingitis than Lohmann Selected Leghorns, whereas the reverse was found in the proportion of cases with coccidiosis. The hybrid differences found underline the importance of genotype. |
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ISSN: | 0032-5791 |
DOI: | 10.1093/ps/80.3.266 |