Two remedial treatments to reduce the high incidence of broken eggs in the furnished cages of our experimental layer farm were investigated: lining the nest floor with artificial turf (to increase nest accep-tance) and lowering perch height (to reduce the chance of egg breakage of outside-nest eggs). A 2 × 2 facto-rial design was used with low (7 cm) or high (24 cm) perches, and with nest floors lined with artificial turf or plastic mesh. Eight cages, each housing 8 hens initially (aged 40 to 56 wk), were used per treatment. Egg loca-tion and percentage of broken eggs were recorded. Hen position (cage floor, nest, or perch) was recorded by direct scan-sampling observations. In addition, 8 cages (4 high + 4 low) each containing 8 hens (aged 54 to 56 wk) were videorecorded to determine perch use and be-havior during the light period. Data were mainly ana-lyzed using logistic regression and mixed models with cage as the experimental unit. Nest floor material did not influence the percentage of eggs broken or laid out-side the nest. The proportion of outside-nest eggs (2. 6 vs. 10. 6%, P = 0. 004), and consequently also of total eggs (2 vs. 4. 6%, P = 0. 016) broken, was lower for low than high cages. Perch use increased during the obser-vation period, more so for the high cages during the light period and the low cages during the dark period. Perch bout duration (P < 0. 001), the likelihood of end-ing a perching bout voluntarily (P = 0. 013), and time spent sitting during perching (P = 0. 007) were lower in low vs. high cages. In this study, replacing plastic mesh nest floor lining with artificial turf was not an effective remedy for the already-high rate of broken eggs, but the prevalence of broken outside-nest eggs was lower in cages with low versus high perches. However, perching behavior during the light period was more disturbed in cages with low perches. © 2013 Poultry Science Association Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Tuyttens, F. A. M., Struelens, E., & Ampe, B. (2013). Remedies for a high incidence of broken eggs in furnished cages: Effectiveness of increasing nest attractiveness and lowering perch height. Poultry Science, 92(1), 19–25. https://doi.org/10.3382/ps.2012-02192
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