Selecting Laying Hens

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Selecting Laying Hens Authors Thompson, R. B. Publisher College of Agriculture, University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) Download date 26/04/2018 15:39:49 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/196570

of COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE CIRCULAR NO. 39 JUNE, 1921 Agricultural Experiment Station D W WOPKING. DIRECTOR SELECTING LAYING HENS By R. B THOMPSON Poultry Husbandman GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS CONDITION To lay well a hen must have a good appetite and a sound body. She must have a good constitution and be vigorous and healthy in order to stand up under the strain of continued heavy production. A bright, clear eye; an active disposition; a plump, red comb, and good blood circulation are indications of good vigor and health. Physical defects such as crooked back, exceptionally long toe-nails, overhanging eyelids, crossed beak, excessively scaly legs, lameness, or any other defect, which will decrease the activity and reduce the possibilities of the hen securing an abundance of feed, will keep her from producing to her maximum capacity. BODY TYPE The body of the hen of high production is usually well balanced and deep, showing almost rectangular form with well-developed breast and abdomen. Great depth of body is especially desirable. Large capacity is essential if a hen is to lay long and heavily. When in laying condition such capacity is indicated by a body that is deeper at the rear end of the keel bone than at the front end. The underline should be relatively straight and the back should be comparatively

2 CIRCULAR NO. 39 horizontal when the hen is standing in a natural position. The male shows the same general characteristics as the female, except that the abdomen is not so deep. A small capacity hen usually stands erect with the back line at a noticeable angle to horizontal. In poor producers the body may be shallow and deficient in breast and abdomen, or in beefy individuals the abdomen may be abnormally large and sagging, due to excessive fat or muscular development. Occasionally extremely poor producers show a hump on the back rather than the straight backline of the desirable hen. HEAD POINTS A clean, fine-cut head with a lean face, free from wrinkles and overhanging eyebrows is associated with high production. A medium stout, moderately well-curved beak indicates greater strength and pos- Jbilities for higher production than either the long, extremely narrow head and beak, or the fat, full, round head. The high producing hen usually presents a clean-cut, wide-open eye, round and prominent, well set on the side of the head with a considerable amount of white showing in front of the eyeball. The eye of a low producing hen frequently shows more white in back of the eyeball than in front, is dull and depressed, has the appeatance of being set on the front of the head and is usually accompanied by overhanging eyebrows and wrinkled skin at the back of the eye. The desirable comb has a broad, firm attachment to the head, is of moderate size with broad points and the blade follows the curve of the head. LEGS AND TOES The shanks of a heavy producer are lean and angular, covered with smooth, close-fitting scales The rear tendon is prominent and pliable. The poor producer possesses shanks which are round and filled with fat, and covered with coarse, rough scales The tendon is not prominent and is frequently completely encased with fat. The toes should be straight and the toe nails should show evidence of proper exercise and industry. PIGMENTATION AND SECONDARY SEXUAL CHARACTERS The surplus fat in the body of a laying hen disappears during the period of production. The type of the individual hen and the

SELECTING LAYING HENS 3 functions of the different portions of the body have a direct relation to the time required to use the stored fat. A large hen fed an abundance of green feed or yellow corn, and having a coarse, thick skin, will bleach much slower than a small hen of the same type or one of equal weight with a thin pliable skin, or that has not had the yellow fat-forming feeds. The portions of the body where there is the greatest amount of blood circulation will fade more rapidly than the portions where the blood circulates slowly. When a hen presents an extremely coarse appearance it is a safe indication that she has not been in production for weeks or even months. The filling out of the face and wattles with fat during non-production is a slow process, as is the removal of the fat from these sections during production, that is, the change from one condition to the other is not instantaneous. It is a reliable indication of prolonged production when the face is lean and the wattles are waxy and pliable but contain no fat If a hen is prepared to produce heavily, her comb will be full, red, stiff, velvety, and have a glossy appearance. As the ovary decreases in size and production drops off, the comb loses its stiffness and is soft and flabby, and later, when production ceases, it is shnmken, fh :y and hard, covered with a white, powdery appearing dandruff or scale. When a hen is coming back into production, the comb enlarges and the whitish scales are broken up showing glossy areas, and is rather warm to the touch. SPECIFIC CONSIDERATIONS THE VENT The vent (1) loses # its yellow color with one or two weeks of laying. A loose, moist vent means that the hen is producing eggs. A tight, dry vent means that she has discontinued laying at that time. THE EYERING The eyering (2) is the inner edge of the eyelids, and requires from one to two weeks longer to bleach out than the vent. THE EAR LOBE The ear lobe (3) of the Mediterranean breeds and other white ear lobed varieties requires a few days longer to lose the yellow or fat coloring than the eyering.

SELECTING LAYING HENS 5 ment. This transparency should not be confused with the bleached condition. Quite frequently the last bit of yellow to be found on the beak of a producing hen will be a small dot on the top of the upper mandible. THE U>WIi,R MANDIBLE The lower mandible (5) bleaches more rapidly than the upper mandible but may be used as an indicator for breeds where black or horn color obscures the yellow in the upper mandible. SHANKS The shanks (6) bleach out more slowly than any of the other portions. Pale or bleached shanks, therefore, indicate production for a period of fifteen to twenty weeks. The color of the shanks fades from the scales on the front of the shanks toward the back. Therefore, a hen with the front of the shanks bleached and the rear yellow would be considered as a hen having produced for a period not to exceed the ten weeks just passed. COMB, WATTIES, AND EAR LOBES Comb, wattles, and ear lobes (7 and 3) indicate the activity of the ovary. Comb, wattles, and ear lobes that are fully extended, hard, plump, glossy, and waxy indicate that the hen is in heavy production. A shriveled and dried comb covered with a pale or pink to white dandruff indicates an inactive ovary and therefore a non-producing hen. THE ABDOMEN The abdomen (8) is dilated and soft, the pelvic arches being well spread and the keel forced down from the pelvic bones, giving greater capacity. A soft, velvety or silky skin and straight, pliable pelvic bones indicate high production. Stiff pelvic bones and a coarse, leathery skin underlaid with much fat indicate low production. LATERAL STFRNAL PROCESS BONES These bones are found on each side of and extending nearly parallel to the breast or keel bone. Ordinarily in high-producing hens these bones are widespread and prominent with the ends making an outward flare which makes it easy to feel them extending away from the keel bone. When they are found to follow the keel bone and lie

6 CiactrtAi No. 39 almost next to it, with the ends curving in so as to almost to meet, it is a safe indication of poor production. Frequently in the best producing hens the end of the keel bone will be exceptionally prominent and turn down, giving the end the appearance of a pitcher lip. TH SCALES The scales (9) on the heel or hock joint indicate the natural color of the shanks. These scales are the last to lose their color, and, when all other portions of the body are bleached, may be used as an index to determine the amount of bleaching caused by production. MOLTING The first thing a hen does when she stops laying in the summer or fall is to molt. Frequently hens 6f the heavier breeds will produce a few eggs during the molt, but it is a rare occasion when hens of the lighter breeds molt and lay at the same time. The body feathers are shed first, then the tail feathers, and then the wing feathers. The length of time that a hen has been out of* production can be estimated by the molting of the primary wing feathers or the ten flight feathers on the outside joint of the wing. The wing feathers are dropped from the middle out and in. It requires about six weeks for the new inside primary feather to grow full size and an additional two weeks for each additional primary feather. By counting the new primary feathers and multiplying by two, the number of weeks that the hen has been molting will be approximately determined. A hen should not be culled on account of her age. If she survives culling one year after another she may be used as a breeder the next. The more culling she survives the better hen she is proved to be, for she has demonstrated her strong constitution and ability to stand up under heavy and continued production. A hen that is a good producer one year is ordinarily a good producer the next, and a flock of persistent producers makes the best sort of breeders. TIME TO CUIJ, July, August, or September are desirable months to do culling, although the poorest hens may be picked out of the flock earlier.

8 CIRCULAR NO. 39 METHOD Off CULLING In small flocks it is sometimes possible for the owner to readily pick out the poorest by looking over the flock in the yard. Where the hens are rather wild and scary it is well to go over them at night while on the perches and take out those with shriveled combs and hard abdomens, examining them next day to avoid error. With large flocks it is convenient to use catching coops which may be placed in front of a door or gate and drive a portion of the flock into the coop at a time, culling from the coop and thereby not exciting the hens unnecessarily. When flocks are properly culled it is not uncommon to secure a greater ^gg production after than before culling, due to more room and better conditions for the remaining hens PULLETS If the pullets come from carefully selected breeding stock of known value, having been properly hatched, brooded, and reared, there will be little need for culling. Regardless of the ancestry, however, some culling in every flock is essential to good management. When selecting pullets for development and vigor, all comparisons should be made within the same age. Do not attempt to select from a mixed flock but put all of the same age together and the differences in development* will be readily apparent The body type and head points of a pullet about to begin production should follow closely those of a high producing hen but will not be quite so well developed. Ordinarily the pullets which make the most constant growth and development and come into production first will prove to be the heaviest producers.