Abstract

Simple SummaryThe aim of this review paper was to retrace the research journey of the researchers of the Department of Agricultural, Food, and Environmental Science at the University of Perugia, Italy that lasted twenty years and draw updated guidelines regarding the best synergy between chicken type and environment in extensive rearing systems in order to optimize animal welfare, quality, and environmental impact, linked with economical sustainability.The demand for poultry meat, being cheaper than red meat, will drive worldwide production of this product. Accordingly, an increase in production up to 16% is expected in 2025, most of which will occur in developing countries. Most poultry meat production is realized with intensive production systems, and extensive rearing systems (ERS) of poultry (organic, free-range, and low-input) represent only a small portion of poultry production in the EU (about 5%). However, there is an increasing interest in such rearing systems to maintain the good image of product and environmental sustainability, improved animal welfare, and meat quality with an annual trend of growth of about 10%. The aims of this work were to summarize the activities and the viewpoint of the researchers of the Department of Agricultural, Food, and Environmental Science of the University of Perugia (Italy). One of the most important goals of the research unit was the challenge of identifying the best poultry genotypes for ERS, which are important not only for the food industry but also for the improvement of human nutrition. Only the definition of the best genotypes adapted to ERS through the measurement of a wide panel of traits—genetic, physiologic, and behavior—and not only relying on daily weight gain will allow us to achieve this goal.

Highlights

  • There is an increasing interest in such rearing systems to maintain the good image of product and environmental sustainability, improved animal welfare, and meat quality with an annual trend of growth of about 10%

  • Due to the lower cost of poultry meat than red meat, its world production for 2025 is expected to grow by 16% compared to the reference period 2013–2015 (+20% compared to the previous decade) [1]

  • The first research efforts focused on poultry genotypes, considering it essential to define the chicken type that is better suited for the natural environmental conditions of extensive rearing systems (ERS)

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Summary

Introduction

Due to the lower cost of poultry meat than red meat, its world production for 2025 is expected to grow by 16% compared to the reference period 2013–2015 (+20% compared to the previous decade) [1]. Some researchers from the Department of Agricultural, Food, and Environmental Sciences of the University of Perugia, Italy, began to study the different aspects of poultry production in ERS, which resulted in the first scientific paper published on this topic (that we will call “number one” [3]). The aim of this first study was to compare the quantitative and qualitative differences between commercial and organic poultry production systems. Some of the researchers reported were performed in organic rearing systems regulated by Commission Regulation No 889/2008, whereas those in Table S1 clarify the main differences between the used genotypes in all the trials referred to in this review

Genetics
Feeding
Environmental
Findings
Logistical
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