Abstract

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) carry crucial information about chicken egg fertility. Assessing the fertility before incubation holds immense potential for poultry industry efficiency. Our study used headspace sorptive extraction-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry to analyze egg VOCs before and during the initial 12 incubation days. A total of 162 VOCs were identified. Hexanal was significantly higher in unfertilized eggs, whereas compounds such as propan-2-ol, propan-2-one, and carboxylic acids were higher in fertilized eggs. Furthermore, the obtained multiple logistic regression model outperformed the partial least-squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) model, demonstrating lower complexity and superior performance. Fertile eggs were accurately identified in the validation set in 68-75% of the cases during the initial 4 days, to 85 and 100% on days 6 and 8. Finally, hierarchical cluster analysis in fertilized eggs revealed the clustering of VOCs of the same chemical class, indicative of their shared biochemical origin. This suggests a promising direction for future research aimed at understanding the biological information embedded in VOCs and their relationship to biochemical processes during embryo development.

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