Broiler breeder hens were used to determine the effect of drinking water containing a low concentration of a chemical mixture (arsenic, 0.8 ppm; benzene, 1.3 ppm; cadmium, 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this study was to examine possible interactions between drinking water contaminants and suboptimal nutritional status for performance and immune function in male broiler chickens. Experimental drinking water contained a mixture of arsenic, benzene, cadmium, lead, and trichloroethylene (TCE) at low concentrations (0.80, 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study tested the effects of light schedules on performance and yields of broiler chickens. In Experiment 1, light treatments during Days 1 to 49 of age were: 1) 23 h light (L):1 h dark (D); 2) 16L:8D;3) 16L: 3D:1L:4D; and 4) 16L:2D:1L:2D:1L:2D. In Experiment 2, Light Treatments 1 and 2 were the same as Treatments 1 and 4, respectively, in Experiment 1; 3) 23L:1D Days 1 to 7, 16L:8D Days 8 to 14, the light period was increased by 2 h/wk during Days 15 to 35, and 23L:1D Days 36 to 42; and 4) 23L:1D Days 1 to 7, 16L:8D Days 8 to 14, 16L:3D: 2L:3D Days 15 to 21, 16L:2D:4L:2D Days 22 to 28, 16L: 1D:6L:1D Days 29 to 35, and 23L:1D thereafter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to test interactions of dietary lysine or strain crosses provided increased lysine with photoschedule on broiler performance and carcass quality. In Experiment 1, treatments were factorially arranged as two lysine levels [control grower and finisher (NRC, 1984) or control grower and finisher plus .15% L-lysine HCl] and two photoschedules [23 h light (L):1 h dark (D) or 14L:10D].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to measure plasma corticosterone and thyroid hormone concentrations in broilers exposed to various photoschedules. Day-old male broilers were placed on litter floors in light-controlled chambers. Four chambers were randomly assigned to each of four light treatments: 1) 23 h light (L):1 h dark (D) from 1 to 56 d of age (designated extended, E); 2) 1L:3D from 1 to 56 d (intermittent, I); 3) 6L:18D from 1 to 14 d and 1L:3D from 15 to 56 d (brief-I, BI); and 4) 6L:18D from 1 to 14 d and 23L:1D from 15 to 56 d (brief-E, BE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the present study was to compare a restricted (R) lighting program [16 h light (L):8 h dark (D)] with a standard extended (E) lighting schedule (23L:1D) for broilers. Experiment 1 was carried out during March and April (mean temperature of 23.3 C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the present experiment was to examine possible interactions of strain cross and age with photoschedule for broiler performance and carcass yield. Day-old male broiler chicks from strain crosses of either Peterson x Arbor Acres (PA) or Ross x Arbor Acres (RA) were placed in light-controlled chambers (5.6 lx) with either 23 h light (L):1 h dark (D) from 1 to 56 days (Treatment E) or 6L:18D from 1 to 14 days and 1L:3D repeated from 15 to 56 days of age (Treatment BI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the present study was to measure performance and carcass yield from broilers maintained on photoschedules that may influence incidence of leg disorders. Day-old male broilers were placed on litter floors of light-controlled chambers. Four chambers were randomly assigned to each of four light treatments: 1) 23 h light (L): 1 h dark (D) from 1 to 56 days of age (designated extended, E); 2) 1L:3D from 1 to 56 days (intermittent, I); 3) 6L:18D from 1 to 14 days and 1L:3D from 15 to 56 days (brief-I, BI); and 4) 6L:18D from 1 to 14 days and 23L:1D from 15 to 56 days (brief-E, BE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the present study was to examine the interaction of constant photoschedules and genetic background on performance of male broiler breeders. Day-old cockerels from two BW strains were placed on litter floors in light-controlled chambers. Light treatments (LT) (60 lx) consisted of 2, 4, 8, 16, and 24 h light/day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the present experiment was to measure changes in physical variables with sexual maturity (SM), the oviposition of first egg, in sex-linked dwarf pullets when SM was delayed by the photoschedule. Offspring were produced from matings of dwarf Single Comb White Leghorn chickens divergently selected for high (H) or low (L) 20-wk BW. At 15 wk of age, pullets from half-sibling sets were randomly assigned to a diet either of low energy (LE: 2,500 kcal/kg of ME, 15% CP) or high energy (HE: 3,000 kcal/kg of ME, 15% CP) and were placed in cages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred-fifty broiler breeder males were raised to 17 wk of age in floor pens using standard procedures. The males were placed in individual cages at 18 wk of age in an environmentally controlled house and fed for recommended BW to 29 wk of age. At 30 wk of age, birds were randomly assigned to one of five dietary treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred eighty, 16-wk-old, caged broiler breeder males were randomly assigned to one of three feeding treatments: 1) restricted feeding (RES), breeder-recommended levels minus 25%; 2) control feeding (CON), breeder-recommended levels; 3) full-fed (FF), ad libitum feeding. Each group received the same corn-soybean diet, with 15.5% CP and 2,878 kcal ME/kg feed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioelectrical measurements (resistance and reactance) were obtained from 35 male and 45 female 8-wk-old broilers using a tetrapolar technique. Body weight, dorsal body length (BL), thigh diameter (TD), and proximate analysis (percentage fat, protein, and moisture) were also ascertained. Twenty birds of each sex were randomly assigned to a calibration group and the remaining birds to a prediction group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBroiler breeder males were randomly assigned at 3 wk of age to one of three feeding treatments: 1) limited amount daily feeding (LD), 2) skip-a-day feeding (SAD), or 3) limited time feeding (LT). The same diet (16% CP and 3,011 kcal ME/kg) was provided from 3 to 22 wk of age to each treatment. The amount of feed or feeding time was adjusted to maintain recommended BW across treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVedette dwarf broiler breeder female chicks were raised in floor pens and fed a standard starter ration. At 3 wk of age, 1,032 pullets were divided into four dietary treatment groups (258 bird/treatment). Birds were transferred into individual cages at 18 wk of age and at 21 wk of age assigned to one of four laying rations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo experiments were conducted to measure the effects of semen dilution and storage time (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 24, and 48 h) at 22 C on spermatozoal viability (i.e., membrane permeability to ethidium bromide) and to determine the relationship between concentration of viable spermatozoa inseminated (25, 50, 100, and 200 x 10(6] and fertility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt 43 days of age, 246 broiler breeder males were randomly assigned to either a 9, 12, or 15% protein diet (isocaloric) fed on a restricted basis until birds were 50 wk of age. Birds fed the 15% protein diet served as the control group for maintaining body weight. All groups received equal quantities of feed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHens from dwarf Single Comb White Leghorn lines selected for four generations for high (H) and low (L) body weight (BW) plus randombred controls (C), sixty birds per line, were placed in cages at 18 wk of age and randomly assigned to either a full-fed (FF) or restricted-fed (R) (10 percent less than FF group) treatment. Birds received a layer ration having 16% protein and 2,816 kcal/kg metabolizable energy. Water was provided ad libitum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHens in this study were produced from random breeding within lines (high, low, and control) of dwarf White Leghorns that had been divergently selected for four generations for 20-week body weight. Birds were weighed at 10 weeks of age and placed in individual cages at 18 weeks of age. Body weights, shank lengths, and egg weights were obtained at sexual maturity (day of first egg) and at 4, 8, 12, and 16 weeks after sexual maturity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn vitro and in vivo intraluminal perfusions of the uterovaginal junction of the oviduct were performed in an attempt to quantitate sperm release from the uterovaginal sperm host glands (UV-SHG) of breeder hens. Spermatozoa were present in the perfusate at all time periods examined. However, the quantity of spermatozoa recovered showed a significant (P<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of five different feeding levels [136, 125, 113, 102, and 91 g/male/day of a 13.1% crude protein (CP), 3167 kcal metabolizable energy (ME)/kg feed] were evaluated on the reproductive traits of caged adult broiler breeder males from 30 to 60 weeks of age. Individual body weights, semen volume, sperm cells per ejaculate, and fertilizing ability were measured at 30, 40, 50, and 60 weeks of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA total of 53 dwarf Single Comb White Leghorn males from the relaxed selection mating of low and high body weight lines and a randombred control line were used to determine the influence of technique (eosin-nigrosin smears or collection of spermatozoa on membrane filters) and examiner on the assessment of sperm morphology. There were significant (P less than .05) line, technique, examiner, and technique X examiner interactions for sperm abnormalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixty-one dwarf broiler breeder hens (58 weeks of age) were utilized to examine relationships among body weight, body fat, oviduct fat, and fertility. Body weight showed a significant (P less than .05) positive relationship to percent body fat (r = +.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe accuracy of fluorometry for estimating percentages of dead chicken spermatozoa was investigated by comparing this technique with the eosin-nigrosin differential staining procedure and with glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT) concentration in seminal plasma. The relationship between percent dead sperm measured by fluorometry and fertility was also examined. The correlation coefficient of percentage of dead spermatozoa determined by fluorometry with eosin-nigrosin counts was highly significant (r = .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred and nine White Leghorn hens (50 weeks of age) were used to determine the relationships among fertility, sperm storage, and shell quality. The hens were artificially inseminated (AI) on 2 consecutive days with 100 million spermatozoa per insemination. Eggs were collected for 17 days and were classified as hard shell (HS), thin shell (TS), or shell-less (SL).
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