Spring-hatched broiler breeders housed in non-lightproof facilities are frequently maintained on long daylengths to prevent precocity, but controlled-feeding and delayed dissipation of photorefractoriness retard sexual maturation. Trials were conducted to determine the appropriate growth for birds maintained on 14-h photoperiods, and to compare responses with naturally increasing and decreasing daylengths. Birds maintained on 14-h photoperiods matured about 5 d earlier and produced 2 more eggs to 60 weeks for each 10-d advance in age at 2.1 kg. However, despite requiring 0.2 kg less feed to reach 2.1 kg, accelerating growth resulted in 0.5 kg more feed being consumed to sexual maturity. The accelerated-growth birds produced more eggs that were too small for hatching and more double-yolked eggs during the early weeks of production. The data suggest that profitability is maximised when constant-14-h birds reach 2.1 kg at about 18-19 weeks. There were no significant differences in maturity between conventionally-grown birds given increasing or decreasing daylengths or those held on 14-h photoperiods, though there was a tendency for the constant 14-h birds to have later maturity, to produce 6-7 fewer eggs to 60 weeks, and to consume more feed per egg, resulting in a lower economic margin than naturally lighted birds. The wisdom of rearing Springhatched broiler breeders on long photoperiods to avoid precocity is therefore questionable. Birds allowed faster growth, generally matured about three weeks earlier than conventionally-grown birds, but matured five weeks earlier when given an increasing lighting regimen that started from 10 h rather than 11 h.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.