Abstract

Simple SummaryIn commercial chicken meat production, broiler chickens are usually kept on the floor in ware-house like buildings, but the use of cages is becoming more common. Confining chickens to cages is a welfare problem, as has been thoroughly demonstrated for laying hens used for egg production. Caged broiler chickens may suffer from poor bone strength due to lack of exercise, feather loss, and restriction of natural behavior. There are also potential food safety concerns associated with the use of cages. While cages may provide an economic advantage in some geographical regions of the world, the severe, inherent disadvantages should also be considered before cages are more widely adopted in the global broiler chicken industry.In most areas of the world, broiler chickens are raised in floor systems, but cage confinement is becoming more common. The welfare of broiler chickens in cages is affected by movement restriction, poor bone strength due to lack of exercise, and prevention of key behavioral patterns such as dustbathing and ground scratching. Cages for broiler chickens also have a long history of causing skin and leg conditions that could further compromise welfare, but a lack of controlled studies makes it difficult to draw conclusions about newer cage designs. Cage environments are usually stocked at a higher density than open floor systems, and the limited studies available suggest that caging may lead to increased levels of fear and stress in the birds. Further, birds reared on the floor appear less likely to harbor and shed Salmonella, as litter may serve as a seeding agent for competitive exclusion by other microorganisms. Cages for laying hens used in egg production have met with substantial opposition due to welfare concerns and caging broiler chickens will likely be subject to the same kinds of social disapproval.

Highlights

  • IntroductionLitter-bedded floor systems are common for raising broiler chickens used for meat production

  • Litter-bedded floor systems are common for raising broiler chickens used for meat production.In contrast, the egg industry has relied heavily on battery cages—small, wire enclosures that typically hold five to ten laying hens

  • Cages for broiler chicken production have been available for many years, they were not widely adopted because heavy broiler chickens are prone to leg deformities [1,2,3], breast blisters [4], and other skin imperfections such as enlarged feather follicles [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Litter-bedded floor systems are common for raising broiler chickens used for meat production. Due to abrasion against the wire cage floor [6,7,8] and these problems have adversely affected meat quality [7,9] Another problem is the comparatively short time period that broiler chickens are confined to cages before they reach market weight, and the concomitant labor requirements associated with moving chickens into and out of cages [4]. Cages are used in Africa [18], India [19,20], and Eastern European countries [3] It appears that not all broiler chickens are being raised in the newer colony cage designs. The welfare of caged broiler chickens is justifiably likely to attract as much concern as cages for laying-hens have in the egg industry

Spatial Restriction
Stocking Density
Leg Disorders
Lack of Loose Litter
Growth
Fear and Stress
Plumage Deterioration and Mortality
Food Safety
Findings
10. Conclusions
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