Effects of barrier perch access and early dietary protein and energy dilution on some welfare parameters, tibiotarsus measurements, fear and mobility level in broiler chickens.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine the effects of dietary energy and protein dilution on broiler chicken welfare, mobility, and tibiotarsus measurements, as well as the impact of barrier perches.
Results Summary
The diluted diet (10% energy and 20% crude protein reduction) improved gait scores and reduced foot pad dermatitis incidence but decreased tibiotarsus bone mineral content. Barrier perches increased mobility but did not significantly affect welfare or bone parameters.
Population
Male one-day-old broiler chickens (Ross 308).
Effective Dosage
Diet diluted by 10% energy and 20% crude protein (0-21 days), followed by control diet (22-42 days).
Duration
42 days.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
access to a barrier perch | increase | mobility | broiler chickens | - | increased | #1 |
the diluted diet | increase | mobility | broiler chickens | - | increased | #2 |
access to a barrier perch | no change | tibiotarsus and welfare parameters | broiler chickens | no significant effect | had no significant effect | #3 |
the diluted diet | increase | gait scores | broiler chickens | P < 0.05 | had better | #4 |
the diluted diet | decrease | foot pad dermatitis incidence | broiler chickens | P < 0.01 | lower | #5 |
the diluted diet | no change | bone mineral density | broiler chickens | no significant effect | had no significant effect | #6 |
the diluted diet | decrease | tibiotarsus bone mineral content | broiler chickens | P < 0.05 | reduced | #7 |
the diluted diet | increase | leg health | broiler chickens | - | provided positive effects | #8 |
the diluted diet | increase | broiler chicken welfare | broiler chickens | - | improving | #9 |
1. This experiment determined the effect of increasing mobility in broiler chickens by placing barrier perches between feeders and drinkers. In addition, the limitation of early weight gain by dietary energy and protein dilution on some welfare parameters, tibiotarsus measurements, fear and mobility level was examined.2. A total of 504 male, one-day-old broiler chickens (Ross 308) were randomly allocated to four treatments with three replicate pens per treatment and 42 broiler chickens per pen as a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement. Treatments included feeding the basal control diet between 0-42 days or a diet diluted by 10% energy and 20% crude protein fed between 0-21 d, with the control diet fed between 22-42 d. The second factor was the presence or absence of barrier perches. All treatments were allocated as a completely randomised design. Welfare parameters (foot pad dermatitis, hock burn, gait score, feather score, breast blister), tibiotarsus measurements (bone mineral content, bone mineral density, fluctuating asymmetry and relative fluctuating asymmetry), tonic immobility and mobility level were recorded.3. Results showed that access to a barrier perch and the diluted diet increased the mobility in broiler chickens. However, access to a barrier perch had no significant effect on tibiotarsus and welfare parameters. Broiler chickens had better gait scores (P < 0.05) and lower foot pad dermatitis incidence (P < 0.01) in groups fed the diluted diet. The diluted diet had no significant effect on bone mineral density but reduced the tibiotarsus bone mineral content (P < 0.05).4. In conclusion, the diluted diet provided positive effects in terms of leg health due to weight gain limitations in the early period, thus improving broiler chicken welfare.