Chick Mortality Affected By Breeder Fowl HERBERT C, JORDAN Associate Professor Poultry Science Early death of young birds in captivity can be alleviated, often substantially, by improving the health of the breeder fowl before and during fertile egg production time. “Yesterday is today” in poultry management. How breeders per form, and how their embryos develop, hatch and grow, depends on care of young breeders from one day of age. Over years of opening unhatched eggs to examine chick, embryo, blastodisc or blastoderm, I have seen infertility or early dead range from 10 percent to more than 40 percent of the eggs set. Hatchability of fertile eggs also has been found in the range of 40 percent to 90 percent. Furthermore, poults or chicks grown out from unhealthy breed ers will result many times in young that never perform well. The goal, then, is to improve the health of our breeder fowl to result in healthy embryos that grow into healthy, productive chicks and adults. Consider: • What a female eats from one week to 16 weeks of age may affect the quality of fertile eggs and chicks that she produces as an adult. Effects of poor nutrition is also true, although less evident, in the male. Neglected breeders often result in low quality chicks, even though the breeders carry the genes to perform well. • Breathing voluntary or involuntary - must be regular, not labored, in order to effectively supply oxygen to all necessary cells of the breeder’s body, and produce a healthy mom and chick. Sufficient fresh air for brea thing,' and adequate living space, are two low-cost requirements for breeder fowl. A breeder female chicken may utilize 40-50 cubic feet of air or more per day. At .072 pounds per cubic foot, the air con sumed may weigh 3.6 pounds per day, which is more pounds than the feed she’ll consume in a day. • Diarrhea or manure that is watery, liquid or loose is a prob lem itself and also may give rise to additional problems. Maintaining a normal gastrointestinal tract in both breeder and young birds is vital. A healthy GI tract is worth 100 hours a year of your time. In birds with loose manure, some of the feed has not had time to be digested so that all essential nutrients are not absorbed by the intestine. Feed passing through the body undigested is a lost resource. Wet litter or wet manure in a pit may result in too much toxic gas in the breeder pen, and may lead to a reduction in mating. Fertility declines, hatch is low or late, and the chicks produced are weak. Started chicks or poults from a breeder flock kept under such con ditions frequently die. Abnormally wet manure (diar rhea) can result from consumption of moldy feed, dirty water or con taminated litter. If birds eat such litter illness can result. Wet man ure may also result from excessive protein, salt or other minerals in the diet. Formed manure produced in a stool not only indicates a healthier bird and offspring, but it will dry faster and be higher quality fertil izer without a repulsive odor. Dry stooled manure produces fewer flies. • Obesity in a breeder bird of any species is undesirable. Excess, hard abdominal fat seems to reduce the bird’s ability to pro duce viable sperm or egg cells that combine to yield high fertility and hatchability. Eggs produced by most fat birds do not seem to have a vigor ous, viable, embryo. According to some scientists, mutation, meta morphosis or functional change in birds take place in egg cells before or after fertilization. Not all muta tions are valuable, as the egg cell can change into a weak or crippled chick. Some say evolution takes place in the egg cell. • Flabby muscles, rarely seen in breeders and rarely seen in pheas ants, nevertheless is possible. This disorder results in birds given to much sitting, a lower mating rate, and when mating, production of weak embryos. Breeders sus pected of flabby muscle disorder should be handled weekly to determine softness of muscle, especially in the legs, and lame ness. All dead breeders with flab by muscles should be necropsicd. Diet and exercise can firm up the muscles of living birds. Some vitamins, amino acids and uniden tified components in ingredients such as fish meal can be generated as a result of gut fermentation in a well-fed breeder to help produce more fertile eggs and healthy embryos and chicks. • Lightweight, abnormal or low-density bone in breeders may lead to their silling rather than moving, which results in reduced mating, and to inadequate egg or sperm production. The quality of sperm and eggs produced by birds with low qual ity bone marrow or bones is a question to be examined in the future. Bone and joint disorders appear to be more common in some poultry today than ever Hea^h before, • As amino acid level in feed reaches the optimum or excess, feed intake is reduced, some sci entists report. Limited feed intake will produce a bird with character istics difficult to measure. To determine nutrient con sumption in breeders, feed con sumption should be measured dai ly. Nutrient content of the litter, or anything at which a bird pecks, should be considered as well as feed. Also, sources of other nutri ents, such as vitamin-mineral electrolyte (VME) solutions, and carriers in other treatments such as vaccines or medicines, should be examined. • Abnormal feathers in breeders can be an indication of poor health and a harbinger of illness and weak chicks. Feather quality should be a matter of daily obser vation. Abnormal feathering may result from too much competition among birds, social incompatibili ty, poor nutrition, toxic gas pollu tion in the atmosphere, low water consumption, wet litter, air- or feed-borne pollutants, or inadequ ate living space per bird. Feather quality of breeders can be improved by elimination of the above problems, and by cool room brooding of chicks at two to six weeks of age that will be sub- (Turn to Page D 24)