Works (3)

Updated: July 5th, 2023 15:54

2009 journal article

Broiler incubation. 2. Interaction of incubation and brooding temperatures on broiler chick feed consumption and growth

POULTRY SCIENCE, 88(6), 1321–1329.

By: N. Leksrisompong n, H. Romero-Sanchez*, P. Plumstead n, K. Brannan n, S. Yahav* & J. Brake n

author keywords: incubation; brooding; chick quality; feed consumption; livability
MeSH headings : Animals; Body Weight / physiology; Chickens / growth & development; Chickens / metabolism; Chickens / physiology; Eating / physiology; Female; Incubators / veterinary; Male; Temperature
TL;DR: The results showed that the hot brooding litter temperature supported increased feed consumption during the first few days of brooding even for the chicks that had been subjected to high incubation temperature. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

2008 journal article

Feeding broiler breeder males. 4. Deficient feed allocation reduces fertility and broiler progeny body weight

POULTRY SCIENCE, 87(4), 805–811.

By: H. Romero-Sanchez*, P. Plumstead n, N. Leksrisompong n, K. Brannan n & J. Brake n

author keywords: broiler breeder male; rearing nutrition; fertility; broiler performance
MeSH headings : Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena; Animals; Body Weight / physiology; Chickens / physiology; Eating / physiology; Energy Metabolism; Female; Fertility / physiology; Male; Nutritional Status / physiology
TL;DR: Adequate breeder male feed allocation during the production period improved fertility and favorably affected broiler progeny performance in both experiments, which suggests that the males with the greatest genetic potential were not mating at these times. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

2007 journal article

Broiler incubation. 1. Effect of elevated temperature during late incubation on body weight and organs of chicks

POULTRY SCIENCE, 86(12), 2685–2691.

By: N. Leksrisompong n, H. Romero-Sanchez*, P. Plumstead n, K. Brannan n & J. Brake n

author keywords: incubation; egg temperature; embryo development; embryo organ; heart
MeSH headings : Animals; Body Weight / physiology; Chick Embryo; Chickens / growth & development; Female; Male; Ovum; Temperature
TL;DR: A striking feature of the chicks that developed at an elevated egg temperature was their white color as compared with the yellow color of chicks from eggs incubated at more normal temperatures. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

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