The laying hen as a bird has some
specific differences compared to
mammals. Besides the obvious characteristics
of feathers and the ability to lay
eggs, a major difference is the totally different
bone system. In addition to pneumatic
bones for the reduction of bodyweight to
enable flight, the bird has the peculiarity
of a medullary bone system. The medullary
bone system allows the bird to store calcium
in the bones and mobilise the calcium
later for eggshell formation.
As the age of
the hen increases, the capacity to store calcium
in the medullary bone system declines.
As a result, calcium is increasingly resorbed
from other bone tissues with a consequently
higher risk of bone fractures.
The main
cause of bone fractures is impact within the
housing environment, but handling of the
hens, especially at the time of depopulation,
can also repeatedly result in bone fractures.
Taking the prolonged laying cycles of our
hens into account, bone fractures in laying
hens become an even more relevant topic.
Influences on the prevalence of fractures are
seen in the husbandry system, bird management
and nutrition but also in genetics.
Investigation by keel bone palpation
The influence of genetics and possible correlations
of bone chan ges to performance
traits were examined more closely in a study.
Two different white pure lines of the LSL
breeding program were investigated twice,
at 46 and 70 weeks of age, for bone changes.
At both ages, 5869 hens in total were
examined. The focus was on the keel bone
(sternum) of the hen, which was examined
using the tactile procedure of keel bone palpation.
For this palpation procedure, the hen
was fixed by the left hand by its wings, while
the thumb and forefinger of the right hand
scanned the keel bone for changes. The keel
bone evaluation was performed using a
four-score assessment scheme: 1- fracture,
2- severe deformation, 3- slight deformation,
4- unchanged keel bone. In summary,
the score 1 to 3 described an indication of
the keel bone while score 4 stands for an
undamaged keel bone without indications.
Figure 1: Keel bone palpation assessment scores
Genetics has an influence on bone
changes
The palpation showed a clear result at
both ages examined in the study. At both
palpation dates there was a much higher
incidence of total indications in Line A
compared to Line B. In the first palpation
at 46 weeks of age, 76.3% of the hens of
Line A and only 14.3% of the hens of Line B
had a keel bone indication. In the second
palpation at 70 weeks of age, 73.4% and
15.8% of the hens respectively showaed
keel bone indications.
The strong phenotypic
differences of the keel bone palpation
between both lines are also shown
in the estimated heritabilities. For Line
A, a moderate heritability of h2 = 0.3 and
for Line B a lower heritability of h2 = 0.15
could be estimated. The genetic correlation
does not show a link of keel bone
changes to relevant egg quality traits such
as shell breaking strength (rg = -0.13 to
+0.04) or egg weight (rg = -0.01 to +0.10).
The correlation described in literature between
body weight and bone quality traits could not be estimated (rg = -0.06 to -0.01).
Only a negative correlation to the early egg
number was found (rg = -0.54 to -0.24).
Figure 2: Percentage of hens with and without keel bone indications at 46 and 70 weeks of age
Breeding for better keel bones at the
expense of early egg production
The results show significant differences
between both tested lines. Low to moderate
heritabilities clarify that breeding for the
reduction of keel bone damages seems
to be possible.
The selection for a reduction of keel
bone indication, however, will be accompanied
by later sexual maturity and a reduced
early egg number. Egg quality traits,
in particular shell breaking strength, are
indicated to be not affected. Further studies
on alternative methods compared to
the subjective keel bone palpation will reveal
new possibilities and contribute to a
genetic improvement of the bone quality
and reduction of bone fractures in layers.
Figure 3: Fractured layer keel bone at 72 weeks of age
Bone fractures – a multifactorial
problem
However, we have to take into account the
complexity of the bone fracture problem.
Keel bone changes and broken bones are
a multifactorial problem where breeding
can only contribute to its reduction. Other
areas like nutrition, management and husbandry
systems have a significant influence
on the reduction of bone changes in
laying hens. A sustained reduction of bone
fractures can only be achieved by improvement
in all areas.
Björn Andersson