THE PROTEIN REQUIREMENTS OF LAYING HENS IN FLOOR PENS AND INDIVIDUAL CAGES
- 1 December 1959
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 39 (2) , 176-181
- https://doi.org/10.4141/cjas59-024
Abstract
Diets varying in protein content from 10.9 to 16.7 per cent were fed over a 336-day laying period to hens in both floor pens and individual laying cages. All rations were approximately iso-caloric, the mean productive energy value being 825 Calories per pound. Each ration was fed to 200–240 hens in four floor pens and to 90–96 hens in individual cages.A crude protein level of 13 per cent of the diet proved adequate for egg production, but egg weights and body weights were improved when the dietary protein was increased. Egg shell quality was highest on low protein diets. Interior egg quality was not affected by the protein level in the diet.On comparable diets, birds in individual laying cages laid fewer eggs and consumed less feed than birds in floor pens. Caged birds were heavier in body weight and laid heavier eggs with thicker shells than their counterparts in floor pens. The criteria employed in the measurement of interior egg quality showed no differences between the cage and pen environments, nor did there appear to be any differences in protein requirements between the two environments.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protein Level as a Factor in Egg ProductionPoultry Science, 1957
- Strain Differences in the Incidence of Cage Layer FatiquePoultry Science, 1957
- Intra-Flock Genetic Merit under Floor and Cage ManagementsPoultry Science, 1956
- Environment and Poultry Breeding Problems.Poultry Science, 1956
- The influence of protein levels on poultry productionJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1955
- The Relationship of Clutch Position and Time Interval Between Eggs to Eggshell QualityPoultry Science, 1945