1 / 50

Animal, Plant & Soil Science

Explore the four areas of the chicken industry - broiler production, egg production, broiler breeder, and replacement pullet. Learn about the facility and equipment requirements for each area and the factors that affect profitability.

francism
Download Presentation

Animal, Plant & Soil Science

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Animal, Plant & Soil Science Lesson C7-11 Chicken Production

  2. Interest Approach • Ask students to brainstorm a flowchart of the modern day poultry (chicken) industry. How do high-quality poultry products (chicken breast or eggs) arrive in the grocery store? What are the production steps necessary to get eggs to grocery stores in a short period of time? Discuss the role of vertical integration and how this movement has allowed for the poultry industry to be efficient.

  3. Objectives • Compare and contrast the four areas of the chicken industry. • Determine the facility and equipment requirements for each of the four areas of the chicken industry. • Analyze production practices involved in broiler production, and examine factors that affect profitability in this area of chicken production.

  4. Objectives • Analyze production practices involved in egg production, and examine factors that affect profitability in this area of chicken production. • Analyze production practices in pullet production, and examine factors that affect profitability.

  5. Objectives • Analyze production practices in breeding bird production, and examine factors that affect profitability. • Explain how to select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, and breeding bird production.

  6. broiler breeders egg production in-line system litter molting next boxes off-line system white Leghorn Terms

  7. What are the similarities and differences in the four areas of the chicken industry? • There are four main areas within the chicken industry. • Broiler production, egg production, broiler breeder, and replacement pullet are the main categories that compose the dominant form of poultry production in the United States. • Vertical integration has allowed for the chicken industry to focus on these areas and to design an efficient production system.

  8. What are the similarities and differences in the four areas of the chicken industry? • A. Producing meat is the main focus of the broiler production area in the chicken industry. • This form of production concentrates on growing meat birds by the fastest and most efficient method. • Producers can generate broilers to market weight in about six weeks. • B. Egg production involves the production of high-quality eggs for human use. • Laying hens are housed in cages designed specifically for this purpose in a sound, ideal environment. • Typically, the eggs are collected, cleaned, and graded on-site. • Producers maintain clean, efficient facilities and try to obtain one egg per day from hens.

  9. What are the similarities and differences in the four areas of the chicken industry? • C. Broiler breeders are chickens used to produce fertile eggs that will be hatched to become broilers. • These chickens are selected based on genetic background and their potential to produce high-quality meat birds. • D. Replacement pullets are raised for egg production. • These pullets will replace hens in current egg production. • These pullets are raised until they reach 20 weeks of age by the pullet producer. • Then these birds are transferred to an egg production site.

  10. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • There are similar facility and equipment requirements used throughout the chicken industry. • Some chicken operations need specially designed cages, feeders, and waterers due to the size, age, and purpose of the birds being raised. • A. Broilers are typically raised in a specialized building that is 400 feet long and 40 feet wide. • There are houses in the industry that are 600 feet long and 65 feet wide. • The building is completely open inside with no separate pens or rooms. • The chickens can roam the entire area. • Broilers are not raised in cages.

  11. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • These buildings offer automated heating, ventilation, water, and feed systems. • Ventilation systems allow for air to travel through the building and remove any extra heat or moisture. • Automated water lines offer one nipple per nine birds. • Feed lines are directed to trays where the birds eat. • The floor used in a broiler production building is an earthen floor covered by “litter.” • Litter is an absorbent material that serves as bedding.

  12. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • B. Egg production buildings or layer houses are typically 400 feet long by 40 feet wide. • These buildings use automated heating, ventilation, water, and feed systems. • These birds are housed in specially designed cages that offer comfort and good health to the hens. • Some egg production facilities are designed to stack cages with a conveyer belt for manure, or the cages are sometimes tiered so the manure falls into a pit. • These cages provide a feeder tray and a water nipple.

  13. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • Below the cages is an automated egg collecting system that allows eggs to be collected in an efficient and sanitary manner. • The quality of eggs has shown an increase in the industry because of faster refrigeration. • Many egg production facilities provide space for the birds to lay eggs and space for grading. • Once the eggs are laid, the conveyer belt will take them to washing, grading, and packaging. • Eggs are refrigerated after the grading process has been completed. • This type of facility often allows consumers to have eggs at the grocery store within 24 hours.

  14. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • C. Broiler breeder facilities need to provide an area for growing and breeding. • Space is also needed for nest boxes. • Broiler breeder birds are raised separately until maturity. • Some broiler breeder houses have two levels. • The breeding and feeding area is similar to that of the broiler production house. • The flooring is covered with litter, and the birds can roam the space. • The upper level is designed for the nest boxes; this is where the hens lay eggs.

  15. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • These eggs are transported on a conveyor belt to the egg collection room. • The eggs are boxed up and sent to a hatchery. • Lighting and sound are important aspects of the facility. • These are factors in egg production. • For poultry health, tunnel ventilation systems are used to circulate air, and automated feeders and waterers are used.

  16. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • D. Replacement pullets are raised in a building similar to a broiler house. • The birds are grown in a similar environment and use similar equipment for feed and water. • Once these birds are ready to come into production, they are moved to a layer house.

  17. What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • E. The large, poultry-controlled environmental buildings in each type of operation need similar equipment. • Quality lighting, L.P. or natural gas for furnaces, bulk feed storage bins, a tractor with a front-end loader, a manure spreader, standby electrical generators, and small trailers (to haul equipment) are commonly used to ease the workload on poultry operations. • Some operations use a foot-bath at the entrance of each house or require special clothing and rubber boots to prevent disease contamination. • Other operations do not allow any visitors on-site.

  18. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • Several production practices are involved in a broiler production operation. • From flock management to water quality, several production practices keep the producer busy with raising high-quality broilers for market. • A. Cleaning after every group is essential to ensure a clean environment for young birds.

  19. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • Removing cobwebs and washing walls should be part of the cleaning process. • Disinfecting walls and equipment will help to prevent disease contamination. • Removing all old litter and spreading 2 to 4 inches of clean, dry bedding on the floor is necessary. • Emptying the feed bin and cleaning all feeding and watering equipment also helps. • Many companies require buildings to be completely cleaned before a new group of birds can enter.

  20. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • B. Water quality is an important factor in raising high-quality, healthy birds. • Water should be tested for minerals and bacteria. • Some operations use water treatment plans to guarantee the safest, cleanest water for growing birds. • C. Waste management is a key production practice that must have a particular plan before poultry buildings are built. • Birds will produce manure, which should be removed and disposed of properly. • The producer must design a specific waste management plan to prevent nutrient runoff and leaching and to minimize insect and odor problems.

  21. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • D. When young birds arrive, temperatures should be set at 90° to 92°F (32° to 33°C), feed should be in place, and a record-keeping system should be set. • The record-keeping system will keep track of feed consumed and delivered, mortality, vaccination dates, and medications used. • Once the birds start to grow, temperatures can be dropped to 65°F (18°C) for an end of production temperature. • Providing proper ventilation is a good production practice, which will help regulate the appropriate temperature and remove excess moisture. • Following feeding schedules and maintaining all equipment during production should be top priorities for the operation.

  22. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • E. More time will be required for broiler production during the early stages of growth. • Daily care and observation of health are important steps to maintain a mortality rate of 5 percent or lower. • Company representatives help producers with feeding schedules and vaccination programs. • This helps as the company reduces risks for the producer, which allows more time for the maintenance of housing and equipment.

  23. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • F. The factors that affect profitability in broiler production are bird weights, livability, contract agreements/payments, and cash operating factors (e.g., fuel, litter, electricity, maintenance, and repair). • Building expenses of a broiler operation are a huge capital investment. • If the producer properly maintains buildings and equipment instead of contracting these jobs out, it will help lower costs.

  24. What production practices are involved in broiler production?What factors affect profitability? • Other factors include consumer demands and market conditions. • This will affect bird placement and schedules. • The producer wants to have the buildings full at all times to provide a proper income. • Environmental management practices (e.g., litter distribution, dead bird disposal, air/water quality, and dust/odor issues) can cause an increase in cost if the producer does not maintain a proper management system.

  25. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • Raising layers for egg production requires attention to lighting, temperature, feeding, egg production, and egg collection. • It is important to provide hens with an ideal environment in which to produce eggs. • The following are a few production practices that allow for egg production to be efficient and successful in the chicken industry.

  26. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • A. Control panels within the building should control the lighting program for the hens. • Light programs are important and have to be specific because the length of light hours indicates to the birds when to begin egg production. • When hours of light are increased, hens are brought into production. • The ideal temperature range for a shell egg layer house is between 57° and 79°F (14° and 26°C).

  27. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • B. Providing full feed to egg-producing hens is a general practice used in egg production operations. • Young birds will be on a high percent protein diet. • The level of protein will decrease as the bird grows to maturity. • Another important production practice is to ensure hens have reached a proper body weight before the onset of laying eggs. • The young pullet must attain the proper body weight to support egg production. • It is an important practice to maintain protein, lysine, calcium, and phosphorus during the laying phase.

  28. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • C. Producers should maintain healthy birds through constant, daily observation of the animals, feeding amounts, and actual egg production. • Records are essential to egg-producing operations and should be a top priority. • During egg production, producers need to keep a watchful eye on hen body condition. • This helps the producer decide when to molt the flock. • A common production practice in shell egg layer houses is to induce molting, which is a period of time when the birds will shed and renew their feathers. • Hens will stop laying eggs during this period. • Some hens will go through two molting periods before moving on to a spent hen facility.

  29. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • D. Two types of egg collection systems are used in egg production operations. • The in-line system includes laying, collecting, and grading at one facility. • The off-line system transports the eggs out of the laying house directly to an egg cooling room and then transports them to an egg-processing facility. • Most modern egg production operations use an in-line system. • The egg is transported by a conveyer belt to the egg-processing facility. • The eggs are washed with a detergent solution close to 100°F (38°C) and with a pH of 11.0 that removes soil. • The eggs are visually inspected for any eggshell problems like cracks and blood spots. • Eggs are then graded for packaging. • Once packaged, the eggs move to a cooler room 40° to 45°F (4° to 7°C) and wait for shipment.

  30. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • E. The factors that affect profitability in egg production are contract payments/ agreements and cash operating factors (e.g., fuel, electricity, maintenance, and repair). • Other factors (e.g., hen productivity, feeding system, vaccination schedules, and molting) also influence profitability. • Building expenses of an egg-production operation are a huge capital investment.

  31. What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • If the producer properly maintains the buildings and equipment instead of contracting these jobs out, it will lower costs. • Other factors include consumer demands and market conditions. • Companies provide assistance with feeding and vaccination programs. • It is important to maintain an efficient system in an egg-producing operation. Producers must maintain all aspects of the process and provide a clean, healthy environment for the hens.

  32. What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • Pullet production is conducted in a house similar to a broiler house. • Common production practices include maintenance of facilities, feeding, and daily care of young pullets. • A. Pullet producers grow specially bred chicks for egg-laying production. • A common breed used in the industry is the White Leghorn, but several lines and other breeds are used. • These chicks are hatched at a hatchery and are moved to a pullet production operation within a day or two of being born.

  33. What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • The chicks have typically been vaccinated before arriving at the operation. • Companies are specific about vaccination programs, which are generally overseen by company representatives. • The producer should be ready for these young chicks with a clean, disease- free facility. • Feed and high-quality water should be ready and available. • Chicks are sexed before delivery to the facility. • The grower should only be handling pullets. • Male chicks enter into a broiler operation.

  34. What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • B. The pullet production (pullet replacement operation) will maintain these birds until they reach 20 weeks of age. • Once the pullet has reached this age, it will be transferred to a laying farm for egg production. • Pullets typically are mature enough for egg laying at 24 weeks. • C. The maintenance of facilities is similar to broiler operation practices. • Cleaning, disinfecting, and providing a safe, healthy environment for the birds is a top priority. • Temperatures are set similarly. • Providing proper ventilation is a good production practice that will help regulate the appropriate temperature and remove excess moisture. • Waste management is a top production practice and should be set before the birds arrive.

  35. What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • D. Following feeding schedules and maintaining all equipment during production should be top operation priorities. • More time will be required during the early stages of growth. • Daily care and observation of health are important steps in maintaining a healthy and productive flock.

  36. What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • E. Factors affecting profitability are similar to those in broiler operations. • The most important factor in pullet production is producing a uniform flock with proper weights. • The uniform flock will be more efficient, will have a higher peak production, and will express the full genetic potential. • It is the responsibility of the producer to ensure a uniform flock under ideal environment settings, feeding, and care. • Many companies will provide payment/contract incentives for uniformity and ideal body weight. • Essential steps in record keeping include monitoring feed intake and body weights as well as plotting growth periods.

  37. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • Specific production practices must occur for high-quality birds to be bred and raised. • Breeding bird production includes daily care and feeding of females and males, which are raised in separate buildings. • These operations are contracted out by poultry companies to raise breeder chicks to adult birds. • Biosecurity on breeder farms is tight. • The breeding hens and roosters are to produce fertile hatching eggs for the integrated company. • These eggs will move on to a hatchery to carefully monitor and incubate eggs and to ensure that correct temperature and humidity levels are maintained.

  38. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • A. The female and male birds are kept separately and are raised similarly to those in broiler operations. • The buildings are similar in structure and provide a wide-open space for birds to roam and grow. • Automated feeders and waterers are provided just as in the broiler house. • Lighting in these houses is important because the number of light hours affects egg production. • It is crucial to raise hens to a specific weight before production can begin. • Once the birds reach 20 to 25 weeks old, they are moved into the breeder house. • The ratio used is commonly one cockerel for each eight to ten pullets.

  39. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • The females will move on to the nest boxes to lay fertile eggs. • Once the egg is laid, it will be transported to an egg collection room by a conveyor belt. • These eggs are boxed and sent to a hatchery. • It is important to maintain a stress-free environment for these birds. • Reproduction suffers when anything interrupts the normal environment. • Maintaining a low stress environment, especially in the nesting area, involves keeping it free of noise. • Precisely controlled temperature and lighting systems are important to maintain efficient production and reproduction in a breeder house.

  40. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • B. Feeding and maintaining healthy, peaceful breeder birds is important. • Company representatives assist with the designed feeding program. • Males and females are carefully controlled through feed intake levels, body weight, and condition. • Producing pullets that are ideal in weight and condition will meet the goal of high egg production. • Attention to the health of males and females will ensure adequate fertility and production. • Daily observation will enable birds of weakened or crippled legs to be removed from the breeding pen immediately. • Direct attention to less-than-normal appearance will also help maintain a successful flock. • Carefully controlled operations and well-detailed record keeping will provide the producer with a highly efficient return.

  41. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • C. The producer must provide strict sanitation procedures for effective disease control. • Cleaning and disinfecting the house and equipment are proper production practices. • Maintaining adequate ventilation and clean, dry bedding will also result in cleaner hatching eggs. • Temperatures in a breeder house typically range from 65° to 75°F (18° and 24°C), and it is common for houses to use evaporative cooling systems to provide adequate air movement.

  42. What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability? • D. Factors affecting profitability in breeding bird production are contract payments/agreements and cash operating factors (e.g., fuel, electricity, maintenance, and repair). • Other factors (e.g., environmental settings, feeding systems, vaccination schedules, and care) will also influence profitability. • Building expenses of a breeding bird operation are a huge capital investment. • If the producer properly maintains the buildings and equipment instead of contracting these jobs out, he or she will lower costs.

  43. How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, andbreeding bird production? • In the modern poultry industry, companies supply the birds to the producers. • Producers rarely provide input regarding the type or source for the birds in production. • Contract agreements are made between the company and the producer. • Contracts usually state who will provide the birds, feed, medication, utilities, and labor. • Only small poultry producers who are not tied to a company contract have the ability to select their own birds. • Identifying high-quality, superior birds is an essential step in each of the production systems. • A good poultry producer will exhibit this knowledge and provide sound managerial skills and understanding of producing and preserving the quality of birds delivered.

  44. How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, andbreeding bird production? • A. Broiler chicks should come from a reputable hatchery and should express quality broiler strains. • It is common to only raise pullet chicks; however, cockerels will grow more rapidly. • Pullets will carry more flesh over the back and breast than cockerels. • This will give the pullets a more rounded appearance to the breast, thighs, and legs.

  45. How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, andbreeding bird production? • B. Selection for egg production should include the following characteristics: soft, enlarged comb and wattles; wide, moist vent; increased distance between the pelvic bones; increased distance between pelvic arch and keel; velvety skin; and soft, pliable, enlarged abdomen. • Characteristics of a hen that is out of production include short, hard, shriveled comb and wattles; small, puckered, and dry vent; little distance between the pelvic bones; short distance between pelvic arch and keel; tight, coarse skin; and firm abdomen. • There are many more detailed characteristics for hens in production that should be fully observed before selection.

  46. How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, andbreeding bird production? • C. Pullet replacement chicks should come from a reputable hatchery and should express quality egg-laying genetics and traits. • As pullets grow, the producer should have knowledge in identifying poor growth in birds. • A good layer must have the ideal body condition and attain the proper body weight to support egg production.

  47. How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, andbreeding bird production? • D. Breeding bird production birds are carefully selected and are generally owned by companies. • These birds will express high-quality meat traits and an excellent rate of growth. • Some common assessments used to identify growth potential are skull width, heart girth, back flatness/length/breadth, body depth/ capacity, breast and keel, weight, and color. • A wide skull is an indicator of growth potential. • A good heart girth will indicate enough space for internal organs to maximize growth and development. • Flat backs are a sign of good bone development. • Body depth and capacity also indicate room for internal organ development. • The examination of the breast and keel will determine good meat proportions.

  48. Review • What are the similarities and differences in the four areas of the chicken industry? • What are the facility and equipment requirements for each area in the chicken industry? • What production practices are involved in broiler production? What factors affect profitability?

  49. Review • What are the production practices in egg production? What factors affect profitability? • What are the production practices in pullet production? What factors affect profitability? • What are the production practices in breeding bird production? What factors affect profitability?

  50. Review • How do you select superior animals for broiler, egg, pullet, and breeding bird production?

More Related