Increased activity in broiler chickens is associated with better feed conversion
Christl A. Donnelly, Stephen A. Ellwood, Stephen J. Roberts, Marian Stamp Dawkins

TL;DR
More active broiler chickens do not have worse feed efficiency and may even improve it, partly due to lower mortality.
Contribution
Large-scale commercial study shows increased flock activity is not detrimental to feed conversion ratio.
Findings
More active flocks tended to have lower (more efficient) FCR (p = 0.060).
Positive correlations between optical flow skew and kurtosis with lower FCR (r = 0.608 and 0.603, p < 0.001).
Higher correlations between optical flow skew and kurtosis with mortality (r = 0.388 and 0.454).
Abstract
Farmers are understandably concerned that many proposed improvements to broiler chicken welfare such as ‘enrichments’ lead to the birds being more active, eating more and therefore result in financially detrimental effects on Feed Conversion Ratio (FCR). The current evidence is inconclusive, but most research so far has relied on small-scale pen studies, not flocks studied under commercial conditions. We measured the life-long activity of 34 commercial flocks of Cobb broilers using smart camera technology and analyzed the data using four statistical descriptors of the patterns made by flock movements – mean, variance, skew and kurtosis of optical flow. For each day, we scored each flock by its scaled deviation from the median for each of the four descriptors and gave it 4 overall activity scores, based on its average lifetime deviation from median ([average optical flow value –…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health · Livestock and Poultry Management
