Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher

Previous work has identified an effect of hatch time on chick femur mineralization. This experiment assessed the impact of hatch time and a 24-h post-hatch unfed time period on chick bone mineralization and yolk mineral utilization. In early hatching chicks, yolk Mg, Zn, K, P, Fe, and Cu decreased b...

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Main Authors: R.L. Hopcroft, P.J. Groves, W.I. Muir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-04-01
Series:Poultry Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119578312
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spelling doaj-42e407b5bab1469b9aac7543bb5a7d952020-11-25T02:50:12ZengElsevierPoultry Science0032-57912020-04-0199421762184Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcherR.L. Hopcroft0P.J. Groves1W.I. Muir2Sydney School of Veterinary Science, Poultry Research Foundation, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, NSW 2570, Australia; Corresponding author:Sydney School of Veterinary Science, Poultry Research Foundation, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, NSW 2570, AustraliaSchool of Life and Environmental Sciences, Poultry Research Foundation, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Camden, NSW 2570, AustraliaPrevious work has identified an effect of hatch time on chick femur mineralization. This experiment assessed the impact of hatch time and a 24-h post-hatch unfed time period on chick bone mineralization and yolk mineral utilization. In early hatching chicks, yolk Mg, Zn, K, P, Fe, and Cu decreased by 40 to 50% over the 24-h post-hatch unfed time period, whereas yolk Ca and Na decreased by 25 to 40% (P = 0.026). Yolk Sr was intermediate, decreasing by 37%. Late hatching chicks which had been hatched for no more than 30 h had a higher femur bone ash percentage compared to early hatching chicks which had spent over a 30-hour sojourn unfed in the incubator (P = 0.013). These results indicate that removing chicks from the incubator within 30 h of their hatch is likely to benefit their femoral mineralization.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119578312hatch timebone ashyolkchickmineral
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R.L. Hopcroft
P.J. Groves
W.I. Muir
spellingShingle R.L. Hopcroft
P.J. Groves
W.I. Muir
Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
Poultry Science
hatch time
bone ash
yolk
chick
mineral
author_facet R.L. Hopcroft
P.J. Groves
W.I. Muir
author_sort R.L. Hopcroft
title Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
title_short Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
title_full Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
title_fullStr Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
title_full_unstemmed Changes to Cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
title_sort changes to cobb 500 chick characteristics, bone ash, and residual yolk mineral reserves during time spent in the hatcher
publisher Elsevier
series Poultry Science
issn 0032-5791
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Previous work has identified an effect of hatch time on chick femur mineralization. This experiment assessed the impact of hatch time and a 24-h post-hatch unfed time period on chick bone mineralization and yolk mineral utilization. In early hatching chicks, yolk Mg, Zn, K, P, Fe, and Cu decreased by 40 to 50% over the 24-h post-hatch unfed time period, whereas yolk Ca and Na decreased by 25 to 40% (P = 0.026). Yolk Sr was intermediate, decreasing by 37%. Late hatching chicks which had been hatched for no more than 30 h had a higher femur bone ash percentage compared to early hatching chicks which had spent over a 30-hour sojourn unfed in the incubator (P = 0.013). These results indicate that removing chicks from the incubator within 30 h of their hatch is likely to benefit their femoral mineralization.
topic hatch time
bone ash
yolk
chick
mineral
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119578312
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AT wimuir changestocobb500chickcharacteristicsboneashandresidualyolkmineralreservesduringtimespentinthehatcher
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