Abstract

Changes in the feather-free body (water, lipid and protein) of broiler breeder hens was measured at intervals between 15 and 60 weeks of age to provide information that could be used as the basis for predicting their maintenance requirements. The mean weight of feather-free body protein varied between 348 and 379 g at 15–20 weeks, increasing to 648 g by 40 weeks and then remaining relatively constant for the rest of the laying period. Mean body lipid content increased from 160 g at 15 weeks to 711 g at 60 weeks. The initial increase in feather-free body protein weight can be ascribed to increases in ovary and oviduct weights as the birds become sexually mature, and to the variation in ages at which this development takes place. Our conclusion is that changes in bodyweight in broiler breeders after sexual maturity are mainly in body lipid content, this being a consequence of the way in which the birds are fed, and that any gain in body and feather protein occurs only in hens that are out of lay. We suggest that it should not be necessary to assume that protein and lipid growth is obligatory when determining nutrient requirements of broiler breeder hens.

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