By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi State University hasn't entered the
poultry business, but it does have a new, state-of-the-art,
working broiler facility for research purposes. The
43-by-400 foot broiler house on the Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station's South Farm took in its
first chicks in mid-October. The climate-controlled facility
is operated by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture-Agriculture Research Service at MSU. Wallace
Morgan, head of MSU's Poultry Science Department, said the
university needed this facility to take advantage of the
expertise at USDA's South Central Poultry Research Lab on
campus. "This
collaboration will allow us to do a lot more than we would
have on our own," Morgan said. "It also gives the students
in our department an opportunity to get involved with
running the house." The
broiler facility can house 22,000 chickens. The chicks
arrive one day old and weigh about 1.5 ounces. After seven
weeks and 120 tons of feed, the chickens are ready for
harvest at 5 ý to 6 ý pounds, or about 65 times their
original size. Research
at the facility is focusing on nutrient management and
engineering for environmental control. David May, USDA-ARS
research leader for the poultry lab, will be working with
environmental control in the new facility. "A lot
of our work studying environmental control has been done in
environmental chambers in the lab or at small sites, and you
have to make assumptions on how to apply these results in
real life," May said. "This facility gives us a chance to
test ideas in a full-size facility with real-world
geometry." One of
the main concerns is temperature management, and researchers
are trying to determine the ideal growing temperature for
chickens and how to maintain that in different weather and
seasons. "The
house has to be warm when we put the baby chicks in," Morgan
said. "As the birds grow, they warm it themselves and we
have to look at venting the heat out of the
house." Chickens
have an internal temperature of 104 to 105 degrees and cool
themselves by breathing out moisture. By market time, the
house holds more than 50 tons of chickens trying to keep
cool. Fans are needed to pull this hot, moist air out of the
broiler house to keep the birds from getting too
hot. As a
side investigation, researchers are looking at the economic
feasibility of drawing this warm, moist air from the broiler
house into an adjacent greenhouse. The
nutrient management side of the research is focusing on
bedding material for the birds, comparing traditional wood
shavings to sand. Poultry litter is often used as a
fertilizer, and sand is being tested as a bedding material
to learn its properties. "If the
sand holds more of the nitrogen than the wood does, you have
a more balanced fertilizer and it also has more soil- like
properties than do wood shavings," Morgan said. "There may
be commercial value in landscape applications for this used
bedding." The new
broiler house is completely computer monitored and
controlled. An alarm system is set to telephone operators if
conditions are not in the specified ranges. Records on
variables such as temperature, humidity, light intensity,
water and food consumption, and average broiler weight are
kept so data can be compiled on each batch of
chickens. "If you
have a problem, you can go back and look at all the
variables and see what was associated with the problem,"
Morgan said. The cost
of electricity is one of the biggest expenses in running a
chicken house. Electricity is needed to run the fans and
heating system that keeps the house warm in the winter and
cool in the summer. May is focusing much of his research on
making houses more energy efficient. "To be
efficient, you have to have a tight chicken house so you
don't have air infiltration," May said. "Houses are designed
as tunnels where air can be drawn in one end and moved
through the house and out the other. In many houses, a lot
of air doesn't follow this path because of infiltration
through cracks and gaps in curtain openings." MAFES
received more than $60,000 in donated equipment to run the
broiler house. Companies donating equipment include L.B.
White, Diversified Imports, Hired-Hand, Roxell, ChickMates
and Southwestern Sales. Released:
Dec. 4, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
New Broiler House
Opens For Research
Contact: Dr. Wallace Morgan, (662) 325-3416
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:36
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