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The importance of uniformity

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Navel and cloaca

Navel and cloaca

The importance of uniformity

Once you understand the incubation process of a single egg or a clutch of eggs, you still have to translate this knowledge to make it applicable in a hatchery with thousands of eggs. In addition to different origins of the hatching eggs, hatching egg treatment and hatching egg quality, each incubator also adds another layer of variance to the incubating conditions. So it is evident that not every individual egg will be incubated under the optimal conditions. The embryos have different needs, but a wide variation can also occur between different positions in the incubator, which is mainly due to how the temperature is distributed in an incubator. As soon as you incubate large numbers of eggs all together, the priority is uniformity. Each embryo must be incubated optimally. And because you cannot treat each egg individually but have to treat all the eggs as a batch (incubator), it is vital to get this batch off to the most uniform start possible, so it can be treated as uniformly as possible. The purpose of all the processes is to maintain the optimal 5% 15% 9% conditions and minimise variations within a batch. Taking this approach will ultimately produce dayold chicks with high uniformity. If the day-old drowning chicks show poor uniformity, the broiler producer Lots of chicks or rearing farm will start the cycle with a less uni- with bellies that form flock and then supply less uniform animals are too large/full and feel puffy 12% to the abattoir or layer farmer. This applies to all the links further along in the chain, the higher the uniformity, the better they can start and complete their processes. Weight loss at 18 days (% of egg weight)

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Proportion of eggs (%) Chicks are small and have dehydrated legs that feel dry and hard dehydration

Weight loss and uniformity

Within a batch of eggs, large variations in egg size and weight loss during incubation can occur. On average, hatching eggs lose 10-12% of their initial weight during the first 18 days of the incubation process. The relative humidity significantly influences how much weight is lost. With high relative humidity (RH) the eggs lose less weight. The weight loss is higher with lower relative humidity. Problems are often only seen with individual eggs that have lost less than 5-6% weight or more than 16-17%. This effect varies according to the breed and is also influenced by the age of the parent stock. Uniformity in weight loss is higher at high relative humidity and gets poorer at low relative Optimal zone weight loss Weight loss and uniformity The average weight loss is a less critical factor if the weight loss of individual humidity. copyright protected eggs is very uniform. In that case, fewer eggs will have lost too little or too much moisture, even if the average is a bit below the recommended value. The humidity during the incubation process will have less impact on the final result. However, when large variations between individual eggs occur, it is important to keep the average moisture loss within a narrow margin and closely monitor humidity levels during incubation, even if the average value seems OK (12%).

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