Publication | Open Access
Special Calcium Appetite in Laying Hens
22
Citations
16
References
1984
Year
An experiment was conducted to study calcium appetite and dietary calcium level related to laying hen performance. The experiment consisted of three periods: pre-experimental, training, and experimental. A total of 80 commercial strain laying hens (58 weeks old) were divided into two groups. One group (20 birds) served as a control throughout the experiment and was fed 3.5% dietary calcium without a free-choice calcium supplement. The other 60 birds were randomly divided into 3 sets of 20 and were all fed 3.5% dietary calcium for a pre-experimental period (13 days) as an adaptation period to a new environment prior to a training period (5 weeks). Dietary calcium level was decreased by .5% each week through the 5th week (to 1% Ca) for all 60 hens during the training period. The birds were given access to a free-choice calcium supplement (calcium carbonate granules) during both the pre-experimental and training periods. This dietary regimen was used in an effort to allow all hens to adapt to a supplemental feeding program and be prepared or conditioned for sudden changes in dietary calcium level. At the end of the training period, the 3 sets of 20 hens were fed either 1, 3, or 5% dietary calcium and a free-choice calcium supplement for 6 weeks. As dietary calcium level was increased, there was a decrease in free-choice supplemental calcium intake; however, all birds (except controls) consumed very large amounts of calcium. The training procedure was successful: no hens rejected the supplement. Neither dietary calcium level nor total calcium intake affected feed intake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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