Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages

The study was conducted to investigate the effect of non-genetic factors on growth performance of Indigenous chicken under village condition of Bangladesh. A total of 1070 eggs from Indigenous chicken were set and 628 chicks were hatched. Data were recorded on hatching performance and body weight of...

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Main Authors: N.H. Desha, M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam, A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan
Format: Non-Indexed Article
Published: Universiti Malaysia Kelantan 2016
Online Access:http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8498/
http://www.jtrss.org/JTRSS/volume4/JTRSS-29-01-16-AM3/4-2-122-127.pdf
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spelling my.umk.eprints.84982022-05-23T10:27:49Z http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8498/ Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages N.H. Desha M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan The study was conducted to investigate the effect of non-genetic factors on growth performance of Indigenous chicken under village condition of Bangladesh. A total of 1070 eggs from Indigenous chicken were set and 628 chicks were hatched. Data were recorded on hatching performance and body weight of chicks from week 1 (BWWK1) to week 15 (BWWK15). The non-genetic factors considered were sex, batch, farm, brooding system and feeding system. Least squares means for fertility (%), hatchability (%) and mortality on hatching day (%) of eggs were 70.81, 77.52, and 19.63, respectively. Body weight of male and female birds at 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th,11th, 13th and 15th weeks of age were 45.97 and 38.44 g, 129.36 and 104.94 g, 266.82 and 213.92 g, 453.93 and 390.72 g, 470.58 and 394.75 g, 614.60 and 489.48 g, 693.72 and 462.77 g, 833.94 and 650.77 g, respectively. Artificially hatched birds gained better body weight than the naturally hatched birds up to 11 weeks of age. The coal brooding system was superior to electric and natural brooding. Hand mixed feed gave better growth of birds than commercial feed and scavenging feed resources. Better growth of birds in farm 2 was observed suggesting replication of management system of farm 2 to get better growth. Further, batch, farm, brooding system and feeding system were found to contribute significant (p<0.05) differences in the body weight at various weeks of their age. These results indicated due adjustment of non-genetic management systems for obtaining better growth performance of Indigenous chicken to enhance commercialization of the indigenous chicken flocks in rural areas of the country. Universiti Malaysia Kelantan 2016-12-30 Non-Indexed Article NonPeerReviewed N.H. Desha and M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam and A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan (2016) Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages. Journal of Tropical Resources and Sustainable Sciences, 4 (2). pp. 122-127. ISSN 2462-2389 http://www.jtrss.org/JTRSS/volume4/JTRSS-29-01-16-AM3/4-2-122-127.pdf
institution Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
building Perpustakaan Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
content_source UMK Institutional Repository
url_provider http://umkeprints.umk.edu.my/
description The study was conducted to investigate the effect of non-genetic factors on growth performance of Indigenous chicken under village condition of Bangladesh. A total of 1070 eggs from Indigenous chicken were set and 628 chicks were hatched. Data were recorded on hatching performance and body weight of chicks from week 1 (BWWK1) to week 15 (BWWK15). The non-genetic factors considered were sex, batch, farm, brooding system and feeding system. Least squares means for fertility (%), hatchability (%) and mortality on hatching day (%) of eggs were 70.81, 77.52, and 19.63, respectively. Body weight of male and female birds at 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th,11th, 13th and 15th weeks of age were 45.97 and 38.44 g, 129.36 and 104.94 g, 266.82 and 213.92 g, 453.93 and 390.72 g, 470.58 and 394.75 g, 614.60 and 489.48 g, 693.72 and 462.77 g, 833.94 and 650.77 g, respectively. Artificially hatched birds gained better body weight than the naturally hatched birds up to 11 weeks of age. The coal brooding system was superior to electric and natural brooding. Hand mixed feed gave better growth of birds than commercial feed and scavenging feed resources. Better growth of birds in farm 2 was observed suggesting replication of management system of farm 2 to get better growth. Further, batch, farm, brooding system and feeding system were found to contribute significant (p<0.05) differences in the body weight at various weeks of their age. These results indicated due adjustment of non-genetic management systems for obtaining better growth performance of Indigenous chicken to enhance commercialization of the indigenous chicken flocks in rural areas of the country.
format Non-Indexed Article
author N.H. Desha
M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam
A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan
spellingShingle N.H. Desha
M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam
A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan
Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
author_facet N.H. Desha
M.S.A. Bhuiyan, F. Islam
A.K.F.H. Bhuiyan
author_sort N.H. Desha
title Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
title_short Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
title_full Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
title_fullStr Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
title_full_unstemmed Non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
title_sort non-genetic factors affecting growth performance of indigenous chicken in rural villages
publisher Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
publishDate 2016
url http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/8498/
http://www.jtrss.org/JTRSS/volume4/JTRSS-29-01-16-AM3/4-2-122-127.pdf
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score 13.160551