The importance of bodyweight management

Published on April 26, 2018

The importance of bodyweight management

Bodyweight management is an important parameter to track throughout the life of your birds. From day old to transfer, growth and organ development occurs at various ages. A lack of growth during a stage could have a detrimental impact on pullet quality.

Bodyweight management in your layer flock is one of the most important parameters to track in the poultry house. From my experience, I find that producers often follow the growth during rearing, but they will discontinue once the birds start laying. Keeping an eye on bodyweight is important in each stage for different reasons: in rearing, on target bodyweight has a positive correlation with better performance during the production period, and regular control in production gives producers an indication of whether the farm environment will allow for the best productivity from the birds.

Why is it important to check bodyweights?

A weekly bodyweight control is necessary to check the real evolution of the flock: the sooner we detect deviations, the quicker adjustments can be implemented. Additionally, feeding techniques, such as using empty feeders once a day, can only be correctly implemented when we know bodyweight evolution.

Minimum frequency to check bodyweight :

  • Weekly from day old to 3-4 weeks: bodyweight calculation based on group control. Chicks are weighed by group
  • Weekly from 3 to 26 weeks of age
  • Every 2 weeks between 26 and 35 weeks of age
  • Every 4 weeks after 35 weeks of age

Bodyweight management and uniformity can influence a number of important benchmarks especially at the 5 week age including egg production and livability

Timeline in changes of growth and body components of pullets

What can be surprising for many egg producers is that growth is not linear for your birds. Growth will be at its highest between 6 and 11 weeks, taper off until about 16 weeks and then increase again. This is when the medullary bone is being formed, which is important for strong egg shell quality.

graph bodyweight development

Rearing – investment in your flock

During the rearing period, it is important to aim for the best possible bodyweight at 4-5 weeks old. At the end of rearing, good uniformity is crucial to ensure that the majority of birds are receiving the right management decisions including their feeding program. Uniformity is dependent on:

  • Feeding drinker space / Bird
  • Complete access to the equipment, in particular in aviary systems
  • Feeding times/selection : fewer feedings = bigger meals = less selection
  • Meal length
  • Feeding time adaptation : train the birds in rearing for feeding techniques that will alter be applied in production period (from 5 weeks of age)

Sexual maturity and bodyweight

Finally, when your pullets enter sexual maturity, their bodyweight will determine the average egg weight. Sexual maturity management is also a key factor for controlling bodyweight at the beginning of lay. As an example, for brown birds, many trials showed a bodyweight modification of 80g at sexual maturity induces an egg weight variation of 1g. At this stage bodyweight can be influenced by modifying the flock’s feed and feeding program, especially by focusing on the energy level of the feed. Lighting is another factor that can influence appetite and feeding in your birds. Increasing the amount of light during the rearing period can encourage feed intake and growth.

Summary and conclusions

  • A lack of bodyweight at the start of production will influence the total egg mass produced
  • Rearing period is a key developmental time for future success during the laying period – it is an investment phase
  • Rearing period is a training period
  • Transfer birds before egg production starts

Bodyweight is a key factor for flock management as this will influence future performance of birds. As a consequence, bodyweight should be controlled during the whole life of the layer flocks. Management, in particular nutrition and lighting programs, can help to control bodyweight and let the birds express their genetic potential at 100%.

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