Abstract
Light‐weight, hybrid pullets were reared on litter at 0.070, 0.093, 0.139 and 0.186 m2 of floor area per bird. Flock size was constant at 400 birds per pen and other related factors of management were standardised. Results showed that the different densities of stocking had no commercially important effect on growth rate, food consumption or viability, but feathering was poorer in the more densely populated groups. At 18 weeks of age, some of the birds from each treatment were transferred to battery cages and others to deep‐litter laying quarters and records of their performance in terms of egg production and quality, food consumption, mortality and body weight gain were taken over a period of one year. The use of high stocking densities during the preceding rearing stage caused no impairment of the performance of layers kept in batteries, but was possibly responsible for a small decline in productivity of layers housed on deep litter.