Poultry Science (Dec 2024)

Effects of different feeding strategies on behavior and performance in broiler breeder pullets

  • R.A. van Emous,
  • C. Kemp,
  • J. van Meerveld,
  • J. Lesuisse

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103, no. 12
p. 104336

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: This study examined the effects of different feeding strategies (diluted diets and feeding frequency) on the behavior and performance of broiler breeder pullets. A total of 3,200 1-day-old female pullets (Ross 308) were randomly distributed over 16 floor pens in 4 rooms and allocated to 1 of 4 treatments: (1) control diet once a day (CON), (2) 20% diluted diet once a day (20-ON), (3) 20% diluted diet twice a day (20-TW), and (4) 30% diluted diet twice a day (30-TW). All the pullets of the different treatments were fed to the same body weight (BW) profile. The 30-TW pullets had the highest and the CON pullets the lowest feed intake, with the 20-ON and 20-TW pullets showing intermediate values. Total water intake was the highest for the 30-TW pullets, followed by the 20-TW and 20-ON pullets, and was the lowest for the CON pullets (P < 0.001). The pullets fed twice a day had the highest total water-to-feed ratio, and the pullets fed once a day had the lowest ratio (P = 0.003). Feeding pullets twice a day yielded the highest average BW uniformity, while the pullets fed once a day had the lowest BW uniformity (P = 0.003). Total mortality was lower in the 20-TW and 30-TW pullets than in the 20-ON pullets, which was primarily caused by fewer dead and graded pullets. The pullets fed twice a day showed overall more eating, more drinking and less sitting, object pecking, and aggressive pecking. The behavior pattern during the daylight period was different for the pullets fed twice a day. Pullets on the diluted feeding strategies were less eager to approach the novel feeder and ate less feed (P = 0.002). In conclusion, feeding pullets with adjusted feeding strategies (feeding twice a day and up to 30% diluted diets) resulted in improved behavior and welfare expressed in decreased stereotypic pecking behavior, and lower eagerness to approach the novel feeder with lower feed intake, with improved BW uniformity and decreased mortality.

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