By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A test that predicts a rooster's fertility may one
day dramatically impact the poultry industry. Mississippi's
poultry holds the state's top agriculture spot, with a
current farm gate value of about $1.4 billion. Research in
this field can propel the industry even higher. Dr.
Chris McDaniel, poultry scientist with the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, has applied a
simple fertility test to the poultry industry. His results
indicate the industry could increase egg fertility rates by
5 percent. "If the
poultry industry in Mississippi saw 5 percent more broilers
hatch, the state would annually gain 45.8 million broilers
at a value of $8.7 million at hatching," McDaniel said. "In
the whole United States, a similar 5 percent increase in
fertility would result in 460 million more broilers and $87
million more value to the industry." Currently,
the broiler breeder industry predicts male fertility based
on physical appearances such as the size of the comb on a
rooster's head and length of a portion of the leg. This
correlation is not very accurate, and the industry currently
has an egg fertility rate of 90 percent. Hen fertility is
accurately predicted by egg production. McDaniel
said day-old chicks are worth between 19 and 20 cents. This
cost includes feed for the parent bird, space in the
incubator and labor. Not all fertilized eggs
hatch. "Every
infertile egg costs just as much as a fertile egg, so an
increase in fertility not only means more chickens, but less
loss to the industry," McDaniel said. Trying
to find a way to more accurately determine fertility in
young roosters, McDaniel adapted a sperm quality analyzer,
formerly used for humans, for use with poultry. "The
instrument measures sperm concentration, viability and
motility -- sperm's ability to move on its own -- and gives
a sperm motility index, or SMI," McDaniel said. "We know
these measurements are closely related to
fertility." McDaniel's
research had three steps. He first had to prove in the
laboratory that sperm concentrations, viability and motility
numbers influenced the SMI for chickens. With this proven,
McDaniel then moved to field tests. "I had
to show that a high sperm motility index resulted in high
numbers of fertilized eggs," McDaniel said. To do
this, he collected semen samples, measured sperm
concentrations, viability and the sperm motility index, and
then inseminated hens with the same samples. These results
proved that the SMI accurately predicts
fertility. The
third step involved McDaniel grouping roosters based on
their SMI rating at 27 weeks old. Hens were artificially
inseminated once a week for eight weeks with semen from
roosters in these SMI rankings. "We
learned that semen from males found at a young age to have
the highest SMI fertilized 98 percent of the eggs laid,"
McDaniel said. "The industry-wide average is about 90
percent fertility, so that 8 percent is a big
increase." In the
groupings, only about 10 percent of the roosters ranked
highest in fertility, but the top 78 percent had a 94
percent fertility rate, and the upper 53 percent had 96
percent fertility. Another important finding was that
roosters kept their fertility ranking as they aged, so the
SMI test need only be conducted once in a rooster's
life. A final
step will determine actual fertility in natural mating
situations for roosters with high SMI ratings, McDaniel
said. Once the research is complete, he plans to use the
results to recommend a management change to those in the
poultry industry. "I will
recommend culling a slightly larger percentage of roosters,
but the birds that remain will have a much superior
fertility," McDaniel said. "I propose selecting birds based
on semen quality to increase the chance of fertile
eggs." Released:
June 1, 1998
Animal
Health
Fertility Testing
May Aid Poultry Industry
Contact: Dr. Chris McDaniel, (601) 325-1839
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:30:11
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm98/980601cd.htm
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