AI Article Synopsis

  • Lameness and poor walking ability in rapidly growing broiler chickens pose major welfare concerns and lead to economic losses, with a study revealing that 24.6% of birds had moderate to severe gait impairment.
  • The research involved analyzing gait scores from 5,900 chickens across 59 flocks and found that impaired gait is linked to factors like first-week mortality and tibia measurements, highlighting significant regional and growth-related differences.
  • The study concluded that while gait impairment is prevalent in Norwegian broilers, it cannot be predicted by certain welfare measures, suggesting a need for further research on the connections between mortality and walking ability.

Article Abstract

Lameness and impaired walking ability in rapidly growing meat-type broiler chickens are major welfare issues that cause economic losses. This study analyzed the prevalence of impaired walking and its associations with production data, abattoir registrations, and postmortem tibia measurements in Norwegian broiler chickens. Gait score (GS) was used to assess walking ability in 59 different commercial broiler flocks (Ross 308) close to the slaughter d, 5,900 broilers in total, in 3 different geographical regions. In each flock, 100 arbitrary broilers were gait scored and 10 random broilers were culled to harvest tibias. Abattoir registrations on flock level were collected after slaughter. A total of 24.6% of the broilers had moderate to severe gait impairment. The broilers were sampled in 2 stages, first slaughterhouse/region, and then owner/flock. The final models showed that impaired gait is associated with first-week mortality (P < 0.05), region (P < 0.001), height of tibias mid-shaft (P < 0.05), and calcium content in the tibia ash (P < 0.05), and negatively associated with DOA (P < 0.05). The prevalence of impaired gait indicates that this is a common problem in the broiler industry in Norway, although the mean slaughter age is only 31 d and the maximum allowed animal density is relatively low. Impaired walking ability could not be predicted by the welfare indicators footpad lesion score, total on-farm mortality, and decreasing DOA prevalence. Further studies are needed to explore the relationship between first-week mortality and gait score.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3382/ps/pew433DOI Listing

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