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Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention

Broiler (meat) chickens have been subjected to intense genetic selection. In the past 50 years, broiler growth rates have increased by over 300% (from 25 g per day to 100 g per day). There is growing societal concern that many broiler chickens have impaired locomotion or are even unable to walk. Her...

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Autores principales: Knowles, Toby G., Kestin, Steve C., Haslam, Susan M., Brown, Steven N., Green, Laura E., Butterworth, Andrew, Pope, Stuart J., Pfeiffer, Dirk, Nicol, Christine J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2212134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18253493
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001545
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author Knowles, Toby G.
Kestin, Steve C.
Haslam, Susan M.
Brown, Steven N.
Green, Laura E.
Butterworth, Andrew
Pope, Stuart J.
Pfeiffer, Dirk
Nicol, Christine J.
author_facet Knowles, Toby G.
Kestin, Steve C.
Haslam, Susan M.
Brown, Steven N.
Green, Laura E.
Butterworth, Andrew
Pope, Stuart J.
Pfeiffer, Dirk
Nicol, Christine J.
author_sort Knowles, Toby G.
collection PubMed
description Broiler (meat) chickens have been subjected to intense genetic selection. In the past 50 years, broiler growth rates have increased by over 300% (from 25 g per day to 100 g per day). There is growing societal concern that many broiler chickens have impaired locomotion or are even unable to walk. Here we present the results of a comprehensive survey of commercial flocks which quantifies the risk factors for poor locomotion in broiler chickens. We assessed the walking ability of 51,000 birds, representing 4.8 million birds within 176 flocks. We also obtained information on approximately 150 different management factors associated with each flock. At a mean age of 40 days, over 27.6% of birds in our study showed poor locomotion and 3.3% were almost unable to walk. The high prevalence of poor locomotion occurred despite culling policies designed to remove severely lame birds from flocks. We show that the primary risk factors associated with impaired locomotion and poor leg health are those specifically associated with rate of growth. Factors significantly associated with high gait score included the age of the bird (older birds), visit (second visit to same flock), bird genotype, not feeding whole wheat, a shorter dark period during the day, higher stocking density at the time of assessment, no use of antibiotic, and the use of intact feed pellets. The welfare implications are profound. Worldwide approximately 2×10(10) broilers are reared within similar husbandry systems. We identify a range of management factors that could be altered to reduce leg health problems, but implementation of these changes would be likely to reduce growth rate and production. A debate on the sustainability of current practice in the production of this important food source is required.
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spelling pubmed-22121342008-02-06 Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention Knowles, Toby G. Kestin, Steve C. Haslam, Susan M. Brown, Steven N. Green, Laura E. Butterworth, Andrew Pope, Stuart J. Pfeiffer, Dirk Nicol, Christine J. PLoS One Research Article Broiler (meat) chickens have been subjected to intense genetic selection. In the past 50 years, broiler growth rates have increased by over 300% (from 25 g per day to 100 g per day). There is growing societal concern that many broiler chickens have impaired locomotion or are even unable to walk. Here we present the results of a comprehensive survey of commercial flocks which quantifies the risk factors for poor locomotion in broiler chickens. We assessed the walking ability of 51,000 birds, representing 4.8 million birds within 176 flocks. We also obtained information on approximately 150 different management factors associated with each flock. At a mean age of 40 days, over 27.6% of birds in our study showed poor locomotion and 3.3% were almost unable to walk. The high prevalence of poor locomotion occurred despite culling policies designed to remove severely lame birds from flocks. We show that the primary risk factors associated with impaired locomotion and poor leg health are those specifically associated with rate of growth. Factors significantly associated with high gait score included the age of the bird (older birds), visit (second visit to same flock), bird genotype, not feeding whole wheat, a shorter dark period during the day, higher stocking density at the time of assessment, no use of antibiotic, and the use of intact feed pellets. The welfare implications are profound. Worldwide approximately 2×10(10) broilers are reared within similar husbandry systems. We identify a range of management factors that could be altered to reduce leg health problems, but implementation of these changes would be likely to reduce growth rate and production. A debate on the sustainability of current practice in the production of this important food source is required. Public Library of Science 2008-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2212134/ /pubmed/18253493 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001545 Text en Knowles et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Knowles, Toby G.
Kestin, Steve C.
Haslam, Susan M.
Brown, Steven N.
Green, Laura E.
Butterworth, Andrew
Pope, Stuart J.
Pfeiffer, Dirk
Nicol, Christine J.
Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title_full Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title_fullStr Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title_short Leg Disorders in Broiler Chickens: Prevalence, Risk Factors and Prevention
title_sort leg disorders in broiler chickens: prevalence, risk factors and prevention
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2212134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18253493
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001545
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