Published on Oct. 1, 2016

Optimal Egg Shell Quality: Nutrition Essentials

Obtaining high eggshell quality is important for both table egg and hatching egg purposes. Consumers have come to expect uniform, strong shelled eggs, and for hatching purposes, eggs that have a strong shell will be more likely to produce a healthy chick.

Any issues a producer may be facing with poor eggshell quality can typically be solved or significantly improved by modifying the flock’s nutritional program, namely their calcium intake and transfer to the eggshell.

Prelay Nutrition and Development

Giving your pullets the best start possible in their development will result in better performance in all areas. By feeding them a prelay diet starting two weeks before start of lay with an increased calcium percentage, their medullary bone will develop properly and more robustly. This special bone tissue formed in female birds serves as a calcium reservoir when forming the eggshell. The prelay diet also serves as a transition into the start of lay period and helps to increase feed consumption levels.

The source of shell strength is dietary calcium coming directly from the feed or deposited from the hen’s bones. Deriving calcium from the feed content results in better eggshell strength, but it also results in better overall health of the bird. For this reason, it is very important to maintain calcium absorption from the gut throughout the day and night, especially towards the end of the laying cycle. This is why we recommend increasing the feed calcium percentage in the second phase of the laying period in order to compensate for the lower calcium absorption capacity of older birds.

Calcium Particle Size and Solubility

Maintaining the correct level of calcium in the hen can be accomplished in a number of ways. Dietary calcium can be incorporated by using limestone, oyster shells, or calcium carbonate, but a mix of coarse and fine limestone particles are an ideal choice as it has a lower solubility and therefore a higher gizzard retention. Feeding the hens a mix of coarsely ground limestone and 2-4mm size particles has been shown to prolong calcium absorption leading to increased eggshell strength. It is generally recommended that the ratio of coarse and fine particles should range between 65% coarse and 35% fine and 50% coarse and 50% fine.

nutritional essentials.jpg
Ideal size of limestone particles (2-4mm)

Feeding Technique

It has been found that 40% of feed is ingested in the last 4 hours of the day. This is natural feeding behaviour, and so to encourage this trend, the feeders should be emptied in the middle of the day for 1 to 1.5 hours. Egg shell production starts in the afternoon, so calcium delivered to the birds in the afternoon can go directly to the shell, without going in the medullary bones. Using a mix of coarse and particular calcium allows a long term delivery of calcium to the shell: coarse calcium will be absorbed very quickly while particular calcium will be retained in the gizzard and released slowly in the gut after solubilisation.

feeding technique.png

Midnight feeding can also help to improve egg shell quality. Giving a maximum of 2 hours light in the middle of the night (lights on 3 hours after the lights go off in the evening) will allow layers to finish the remaining part of the feed at a moment where the egg shell is still under construction, immediately improving calcium deposition to the shell.

With these small adjustments in mind when managing your hens, you can significantly improve the eggshell strength and quality.