Exercise-Related Personality Traits Are Associated with Gut Microbiome Composition and Meat Quality in Qingyuan Partridge Chickens
Jiaxin Zhang, Yushan Li, Miaoling Cai, Jun Xiao, Yinghui Liu, Bo Wu, Qianrige, Zheng Ma, Hai Xiang, Xin Feng, Siyu Chen

TL;DR
Chickens that are more active have better meat quality and a healthier gut microbiome, which could help improve poultry farming.
Contribution
This study links exercise-related personality traits to gut microbiome and meat quality in Qingyuan partridge chickens.
Findings
High-exercise chickens showed brighter breast muscle and firmer thigh muscle compared to low-exercise chickens.
High-exercise chickens had increased Bifidobacterium and reduced Staphylococcus in their gut microbiome.
Metabolomic analysis revealed upregulated pathways like phenylalanine metabolism in high-exercise chickens.
Abstract
Chicken meat quality is primarily determined by genetics and nutrition, but recent evidence suggests that animal personality traits and the gut microbiota may also play crucial roles through their influence on muscle development and metabolism. However, the specific mechanisms linking behavior, gut microbiota, and meat flavor remain largely unexplored, particularly in native chicken breeds like the Qingyuan partridge chicken. This study investigated associations between personality traits, gut microbiome composition, metabolite profiles, and meat quality in 200 female Qingyuan partridge chickens. Chickens were monitored for daily step counts from 70 to 120 days of age and divided into three experimental groups: high-exercise (HE), moderate-exercise (ME), and low-exercise (LE). Behavioral tests (open-field, T-maze) revealed HE chickens exhibited enhanced exploration (p < 0.05), reduced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Gut microbiota and health · Meat and Animal Product Quality
