▶What are the key differences between managing broilers, layers, and turkeys?
Broilers (meat chickens): grow fast (6-8 weeks to market weight ~5-6 lbs), need high energy diet, managed in large groups (10,000-30,000 per barn), and are culled at market—no long-term herd. Layers (egg hens): live 12-18 months, need balanced nutrition for sustained egg production, managed in moderately dense systems (aviary, cage, or free-range depending on market), and replaced annually. Turkeys: slower growth than broilers (14-20 weeks), larger final weight (12-20 lbs), more aggressive behavior (require more space per bird, more fighting), similar meat-focus timeline as broilers. Management differs: broilers focus on feed efficiency and flock uniformity (all birds reach target weight together), layers focus on production rate and egg quality (minimizing breaks), turkeys combine both but with more welfare challenges.
▶What is biosecurity and why is it critical in poultry?
Biosecurity is a system preventing disease introduction into and spread within a flock. Measures: (1) Isolation—isolate any sick birds immediately into a separate hospital pen (prevent transmission to healthy birds), (2) Hygiene—change clothes, boots, and wash hands before entering the house (limit pathogen vectors), (3) Equipment sanitation—disinfect feeders, waterers, and tools between flocks, (4) Vaccination—vaccinate against regionally endemic diseases (Newcastle, Marek's disease, infectious bronchitis) per protocol, (5) Quarantine new birds (2-3 weeks) before introducing into the main flock. A poultry disease outbreak (avian flu, infectious laryngotracheitis, Marek's) can kill 5-50% of a flock in days; prevention via biosecurity is FAR cheaper than dealing with an outbreak. Some diseases (HPAI) trigger government culling of entire flocks and loss of all revenue.
▶What is a production record and what metrics should I monitor daily?
Production records track: (1) Feed consumption (lbs/day), (2) Water intake (indicating health—dropping water intake signals illness), (3) Egg production (for layers—% of flock laying, number of eggs, size, quality), (4) Mortality (number dead, % of flock), (5) Equipment function (feeder/waterer blockages, ventilation fan status), (6) Temperature and humidity (critical for broiler growth and layer comfort). Red flags: feed consumption dropping (disease, equipment issue), mortality spiking (outbreak), eggs dropping below expected % (lighting change, diet, heat stress, disease). Track daily; trends reveal problems within 24-48 hours instead of weeks. Use simple spreadsheets or farm management software. Compare to benchmarks (industry standards vary by production system) to identify problems early.
▶How do I manage broiler growth to hit market weight on schedule?
Target broiler market weight (5.5 lbs) is hit at ~42 days if growth is right-on. Manage via: (1) Feeding—provide 'starter' feed (high protein, high energy) weeks 1-3, transition to 'grower' weeks 3-5, finish on 'finisher' (lower protein, lower energy) to prevent leg disease from growing too fast, (2) Lighting—24 hours light first week (encourages eating), then 18-23 hours light (more realistic feed-growth ratio; too much dark time reduces intake), (3) Temperature—start at 95°F (heat lamp), reduce 5°F per week until reaching house temperature (~70°F by week 3), (4) Density—maintain optimal stocking rate (not overcrowded, which stresses birds and reduces growth). Monitoring: weigh samples of birds weekly; if weight is lagging, increase feed or light; if ahead of schedule, reduce feed or light. Hitting target weight uniformly means birds go to market together (no culls for too-light or oversized).
▶What causes sudden mortality spikes in a flock and how do I respond?
Common causes: (1) Disease outbreak (bacterial or viral infection)—sudden deaths often with respiratory or digestive signs; isolate sick birds, get a vet diagnosis immediately, start treatment if bacterial, (2) Heat stress—panting, huddling in cool areas, high mortality; increase ventilation, lower temperature if possible, provide cool water, (3) Equipment failure—feeders clogged, waterers frozen or blocked, ventilation fan down (poor air quality, ammonia buildup kills birds)—check immediately, (4) Feed quality—moldy or contaminated feed; stop feeding, switch to backup feed, discard contaminated batch, (5) Poisoning (nitrite, salt, pesticide)—sudden death without clear signs; switch water and feed, vet diagnostic. Response: isolate sick birds, increase observation frequency (2-4 times per day), notify your integrator or buyer, get veterinary help if unsure, maintain records of deaths (body condition, signs) for diagnosis. Mortality >2-3% warrants investigation.
▶How do I manage water quality in poultry systems?
Water quality affects health and production directly. Issues: (1) Bacterial contamination (E. coli, Salmonella)—sanitize tanks and lines before new flocks, use chlorine or peroxide supplements, test water periodically, (2) High mineral content ('hard water')—interferes with medication absorption; soften if necessary, (3) Algae growth (in outdoor water containers)—blocks flow, encourages pathogens; cover tanks, clean regularly, (4) Equipment issues—waterer nipples blocked (calcification from hard water) means birds cannot drink; clean nipples weekly, replace if worn. Chickens need clean, unrestricted water at all times; production drops if water supply is compromised. Monitor water tank levels daily; low levels indicate equipment failure or high consumption (sometimes disease-related diarrhea). Provide cool water in summer (reduces heat stress) and room-temperature in winter.