M. Vekić, M. Gvozdenovic, L. Perić, D. Savic, S. Jotanović, Mirjana Mitraković
{"title":"Influence of floor egg shell cleanliness and cleaning treatment on hatchability and chick quality","authors":"M. Vekić, M. Gvozdenovic, L. Perić, D. Savic, S. Jotanović, Mirjana Mitraković","doi":"10.2298/bah2102099v","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A total of 3,600 floor eggs from a 59-week-old Cobb 500 parent flock were\n collected to examine the effects of shell cleanliness and cleaning treatment\n on incubation results. The eggs were divided into two equal groups according\n to the cleanliness of the shell: eggs with a visually clean shell (clean\n eggs) and eggs with a dirty shell (dirty eggs). Depending on the cleaning\n treatment, clean and dirty eggs were divided into three equal groups: eggs\n that were not cleaned at all (intact), eggs that were cleaned with metal\n wire (scraped eggs) and eggs that were washed (washed eggs). Cleaning\n treatment significantly affected egg weight loss (p = 0.057). The\n hatchability of set eggs was under significant influence of egg cleanliness\n (p = 0.018), while the hatchability of fertile eggs was under significant\n influence of egg cleanliness (p = 0.003) and cleaning treatment (p = 0.029).\n Significant influence of shell cleanliness (p = 0.000) and cleaning\n treatment (p = 0.000) on egg contamination was also observed. Early, middle\n and total embryonic mortality were not significantly influenced by shell\n cleanliness and cleaning treatment, in contrast to late mortality which was\n under significant influence of egg cleanliness (p = 0.028). The number of\n first grade chicks per incubator tray was significantly influenced by egg\n cleanliness (p = 0.018). Chick weight and length were not significantly\n affected by shell cleanliness and cleaning treatment. The study showed that\n washed eggs had a higher weight loss compared to intact and scraped eggs.\n Dirty eggs had a lower hatchability, a higher percentage of contamination\n and late mortality as well as a lower number of first grade chicks per\n incubation tray, compared to clean eggs. Cleaning treatments did not have a\n significantly positive effect on the incubation results of either clean or\n dirty eggs. Washing treatment had a particularly negative effect on dirty\n eggs as they had reduced hatchability and increased contamination. The\n absence of a positive effect of scraping and washing treatment on the\n incubation results makes justification of these cleaning treatments for\n floor eggs doubtful.","PeriodicalId":249404,"journal":{"name":"Biotehnologija u stocarstvu","volume":"1961 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Biotehnologija u stocarstvu","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2298/bah2102099v","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
A total of 3,600 floor eggs from a 59-week-old Cobb 500 parent flock were
collected to examine the effects of shell cleanliness and cleaning treatment
on incubation results. The eggs were divided into two equal groups according
to the cleanliness of the shell: eggs with a visually clean shell (clean
eggs) and eggs with a dirty shell (dirty eggs). Depending on the cleaning
treatment, clean and dirty eggs were divided into three equal groups: eggs
that were not cleaned at all (intact), eggs that were cleaned with metal
wire (scraped eggs) and eggs that were washed (washed eggs). Cleaning
treatment significantly affected egg weight loss (p = 0.057). The
hatchability of set eggs was under significant influence of egg cleanliness
(p = 0.018), while the hatchability of fertile eggs was under significant
influence of egg cleanliness (p = 0.003) and cleaning treatment (p = 0.029).
Significant influence of shell cleanliness (p = 0.000) and cleaning
treatment (p = 0.000) on egg contamination was also observed. Early, middle
and total embryonic mortality were not significantly influenced by shell
cleanliness and cleaning treatment, in contrast to late mortality which was
under significant influence of egg cleanliness (p = 0.028). The number of
first grade chicks per incubator tray was significantly influenced by egg
cleanliness (p = 0.018). Chick weight and length were not significantly
affected by shell cleanliness and cleaning treatment. The study showed that
washed eggs had a higher weight loss compared to intact and scraped eggs.
Dirty eggs had a lower hatchability, a higher percentage of contamination
and late mortality as well as a lower number of first grade chicks per
incubation tray, compared to clean eggs. Cleaning treatments did not have a
significantly positive effect on the incubation results of either clean or
dirty eggs. Washing treatment had a particularly negative effect on dirty
eggs as they had reduced hatchability and increased contamination. The
absence of a positive effect of scraping and washing treatment on the
incubation results makes justification of these cleaning treatments for
floor eggs doubtful.