Feed particles : what chickens see and touch !
Abstract
Day-old chicks learn to associate nutritional effects with the sensorial characteristics of feed particles, thanks to a precise visual observation of details and specific tactile capabilities of their beak. Selection of feed particles is fast and accurate. However this selection may vary according to the sensorial experience of the animal concerning the feed. Eating rate depends on the size and hardness of the pecked particles. The consequences on production are dependent on environmental conditions. Under fluctuating environmental conditions, chickens adapt faster to a dietary change than when they are kept under a homogenous and constant environment in the shed. The production system may therefore change the perception of the structure of feed particles by chickens and its consequences on productivity. Optimal characteristics are difficult to standardise. New methods result from the collaboration between nutritionists and feed technologists. They evaluate how the bird actually perceives the shape and texture of the feed particles. Studies of food intake behaviour of chickens are useful, at both the farm and laboratory levels, to measure the consequences of feed technology and adapt new modes of feed distribution. Nutrition and sensorial detection interact at the three critical phases of food intake behaviour : identification, prehension and intake of the feed. Modern feed technology that is integrated into the production system should take these three phases into account.
Attachments
No supporting information for this article##plugins.generic.statArticle.title##
Views: 1037
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- S. MEGRET, F. RUDEAUX, J.M. FAURE, M. PICARD, Roles of the beak in poultry. Effects of debeaking , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 9 No. 2 (1996)
- M. QUENTIN , I. BOUVAREL , D. BASTIANELLI , M. PICARD , What « requirements » for essential amino acids in broiler chickens ? A critical survey of their determination and of some practical models , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 17 No. 1 (2004)
- V. DE BASILIO, M. PICARD , The capacity of survival of the chickens to heat stress is increased by early-age thermal conditioning , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 15 No. 4 (2002)
- J.P. MELCION, Feed particle distribution : measurement techniques and applications , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 13 No. 2 (2000): Numéro Spécial : Granulométrie des aliments
- V. NOIROT, I. BOUVAREL, B. BARRIER-GUILLOT, J. CASTAING, J.L. ZWICK, M. PICARD, Whole cereal grains in broiler nutrition : the come back ? , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 11 No. 5 (1998)
- K. BIGOT, S. TESSERAUD, M. TAOUIS, M. PICARD, Posthatch feeding and early development in broiler chicks , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 14 No. 4 (2001)
- A. SANCHEZ, M. PLOUZEAU, P. RAULT, M. PICARD, Muscular growth and cardio-respiratory function in broiler chickens , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 13 No. 1 (2000)
- M. PICARD, B. SAUVEUR, F. FENARDJI, I. ANGULO, P. MONGIN, Suitable technico-economic adjustments for poultry feeding in hot countries , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 6 No. 2 (1993)
- J.P. MELCION, Use of binders in feed pelleting : technological and nutritional aspects , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 8 No. 2 (1995)
- M. PICARD, J.P. MELCION, C. BOUCHOT, J.M. FAURE, Pecking and prehension of feed particles in domestic fowls , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 10 No. 5 (1997)
