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Challenges in Maintaining the Hatch Window

Escrito por: Renata Steffen
Hatch Window

Challenges in Maintaining the Hatch Window

Through genetic evolution, broiler chickens reduce their field-rearing time, reaching slaughter weight sooner.

However, the embryonic development time has not changed, taking 21 days to develop and hatch, although the percentage of their life spent in the hatchery has increased due to improved efficiency in the field (Graph 1).

Graph 1. Participation of incubation in the life of a 2.5 kg chicken. Source: COBB

Hatch window

One of the key points for the quality of the chick is the hatch window which is the interval between the first and last chick born.

Hatcheries strive for excellence in chick quality, which can be greatly affected during the hatching window itself. Added to this is the time spent handling the chicks (sexing, vaccination, shipping, and transport), which can subject them to fasting for up to 72 hours until they arrive at the producer’s housing facility.

 

The wider the hatching window, the longer the fasting period for the first chicks to hatch, and together we will have chicks that are too bloated, as they were born very close to the withdrawal and did not have the necessary time to lose the moisture needed after birth.

Figure 1 represents:

Figure 1.

To ensure a suitable hatching window, care begins even before incubation:

These four management points are very important for chick quality and, in addition to being fundamental in controlling the hatching window, they correlate with the total incubation time of the chicks.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HATCH WINDOW AND INCUBATION TIME

A very important point is differentiate the hatching window time from the total incubation time for removing the chicks from the hatchers.

In Table 1 below we have some indicators that can influence the hatching window and/or chick collection time.

Table 1. Indicators that can influence the hatch window

1. Incubation too early or too late

When we talk about incubation we must take into account the total number of hours incubated, which refers to the time from the start of incubation until the chicks are removed from the hatcher.

Examples: When we have storage of 6 or more days, there tends to be an increase in the incubation time of 0.5 to 1 hour per day of additional storage, since we have slower embryos that need more incubation hours the longer they are stored.

Another factor that interferes with incubation hours is the seasons of the year.

2. Incorrect incubator and brooder temperatures

The temperature of embryonic development is a very important factor for the quality of the chicks and will interfere with both the window and the time of removal of chicks from the hatchers.

Graph A shows an example of an incubator with a uniform temperature that is high for embryos at 18 days, with an average temperature of 102ºF (38.9ºC).

Graph A. Temperature at 18 days of embryonic development – temperature higher than ideal 37.8 °C – average – 37.5 °C

In Graph A1: the birth window in this case will be a window in which 80% of the chicks were born between 468 hours and 492 hours (24-hour interval).

Graph A1. Window design for developing embryos at a higher temperature throughout the incubation period

When there is a development problem at temperatures below 37.8ºC, embryo growth is slower and, when transferred at 19 days, their physiological age will be behind their chronological age.

In Graph B, we can see that the larger blue area shows an average embryo temperature of 37.5 °C, which is uniform throughout the machine.

Graph B. Temperature at 18 days of embryonic development – lower than the ideal temperature of 37.8ºC – with an average of 37.5ºC

In Graph B1, the birth window has the majority of chicks born between 484 and 508 (24-hour interval),

Graph B1. Window model for embryos that were developing at a lower temperature throughout the incubation period

3. No preheating

Preheating is a very important factor in restarting embryonic development. The preheating allows all eggs to be heated evenly and resume uniform embryonic development.

4. Storage days of eggs

Managing egg inventory days is very important in the hatchery to prevent mixing between egg production dates and leaving larger stock egg loads in the hatchery, resulting in younger eggs being incubated.

5. Reproductive age

An important point is to do an incubation load between the same lineage and the same age among the breeders or very close ages.

Example: if you incubate eggs from two farms, it is preferable that the age of the breeders of the incubated eggs is no more than 5 weeks, within the same incubator.

These changes in eggshell quality directly interfere with the gaseous moisture exchange between the embryo and the incubator environment, which is an important factor in the incubation process because it directly affects the weight, incubation time, and quality of the chick at hatching.

6. Microclimate inside incubators and hatchers

A very important point is to monitor the temperature of the embryos inside the incubator to check that the temperature is uniform.

Let’s look at some examples of eggshell temperature graphs for 18-day-old embryos.

Example 1:

In Temperature Graph C, we observe that there is an unevenness in the development temperature of the embryos inside the incubator, which we call a heat island—embryos further back in the incubator are warmer (average red coloration 39.2 °C) and embryos located at the front of the machine are at an average of 38.5 °C.

Graph C. Shell temperature of embryos at 18 days of development inside an incubator

A well-opened window curve trend, ending with a healthy chick beginning the dehydration process. Wet chicks are born later, closer to the time they are removed from the hatcher, as shown in Graph C1.

Graph C1. Hatching window of Graph C with heat islands within the incubator

The hatch window will always be a challenge for all hatcheries, as it involves many variables from the farm to the hatchery.

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