Abstract

The application of ultraviolet (UV) light in poultry production is garnering increased interest with the drive toward improved poultry welfare and optimized production. Poultry can see in the UV spectrum (UVA wavelengths: 320–400 nm) thus inclusion of these shorter wavelengths may be viewed as more natural but are typically excluded in conventional artificial lights. Furthermore, UVB wavelengths (280–315) have physiological impact through stimulation of vitamin D pathways that can then improve skeletal health. However, better understanding of the effects of UV supplementation must occur before implementation practically. This non-systematic literature review aimed to summarize the impacts of UV supplementation on the behavior, welfare, and production of laying hens, meat chickens (breeders and growers), and other domestic poultry species including directions for future research. The literature demonstrated that UVA light has positive impacts on reducing fear and stress responses but in some research, it significantly increases feather pecking over age during the production phase. UVB light will significantly improve skeletal health, but an optimum duration of exposure is necessary to get this benefit. Supplementation with UVB light may have more distinct impacts on egg production and eggshell quality when hens are experiencing a dietary vitamin D3deficiency, or if they are at the terminal end of production. The relative benefits of UVB supplementation across different ages needs to be further verified along with commercial trials to confirm beneficial or detrimental impacts of adding UVA wavelengths. Further research is warranted to determine whether adding natural light wavelengths to indoor poultry production is indeed a positive step toward optimizing commercial housing systems.

Highlights

  • Light is an important component of poultry housing systems as it can affect a bird’s behavior, growth, health, production performance, reproduction, and welfare (Lewis and Morris, 1998; Wineland, 2002)

  • A recent trial across a production cycle on a commercial laying hen farm found that the mean body weights of hens under fluorescent light (FL) were heavier than under a FL+UVA light treatment across the weeks of the trial the supplementation had to be removed prematurely due to its impact on feather pecking behavior

  • UVA light may not play an extensive role in laying hen growth and physiology, but UVB light could have benefits on skeletal health and vitamin D3 synthesis in the body

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Summary

Introduction

Light is an important component of poultry housing systems as it can affect a bird’s behavior, growth, health, production performance, reproduction, and welfare (Lewis and Morris, 1998; Wineland, 2002). UVA supplementation has been demonstrated to reduce pullet feed intake in some research (Lewis et al, 2000b), but increase chick feed intake (Liu et al, 2018) and UVB light has had no feed intake effect in other studies (Gongruttananun, 2011; Lietzow et al, 2012; Schutkowski et al, 2013).

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