Animals (Jan 2023)

A Comparison of the Plumage Condition of Three Egg-Laying Poultry Genotypes Housed in Non-Cage Systems

  • Zofia Sokołowicz,
  • Magdalena Dykiel,
  • Jadwiga Topczewska,
  • Józefa Krawczyk,
  • Anna Augustyńska-Prejsnar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13020185
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 185

Abstract

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The study covered a total of 810 hens in 3 groups (housing systems) of 270 hens each. The plumage condition of laying hens raised in various types of alternative housing systems, i.e., in deep litter (B), free-range (FR), and organic systems (O), was assessed at 20, 36, and 56 weeks of age. The indoor stocking density was 6 hens/m2. The study included hens of the native Green-legged Partridge breed (Z-11), Rhode Island Red (R-11) hens covered by a genetic resource protection program, and hybrids of Hy-Line Brown. The plumage of the head, neck, back, tail, and abdomen was assessed on a 5-point scale. The assessment of individual hens' plumage was calculated as the sum of the scores of the head, neck, back, tail and abdomen and could range from 0 (no cover) to 20 points (full plumage). The type of alternative housing system implemented and the age of the laying hens had an effect on the plumage status of all body parts assessed (p 0.05), while the genotype had an effect on the condition of the neck, back, and tail plumage (p 0.05). In both the FR and O systems, the plumage status was similar and superior to that in B (p 0.05). As the age of the birds increased, the condition of the hens' plumage deteriorated. The better state of the plumage in FR and O than in B may indicate improved levels of welfare in housing systems with access to outside runs.

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