poultry farming by naveed akhtar and his group

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Poultry farming its importance

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Page 1: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group
Page 2: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

TopicPoultry Farming

Presented To: Sir Waqas Ahmad Shams Presented By: Naveed Akhtar, Rafiullah,

Rabia Kausar, Rashid Alam,

Page 3: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Poultry farming

Page 4: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Introduction

Chicken, turkey, duck and goose are all types of birds called poultry.

They are reared for meat.

Page 5: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

• Poultry is the class of domesticated fowl(birds) farmed for their meat, eggs or feathers• These most typically are members of the ordersGalliformes (such as chickens and turkeys),and Anseriformes (waterfowl such as ducks and geese).• Chicken is the most popular poultry speciesutilised for both meat and egg production.

Page 6: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

What types of poultry are there?

Ratites-Ostriches, Emus

Chickens

Ducks

Geese Turkeys

Game Birds

Page 7: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Chickens•Chickens make up the largest sector of the poultry industry.

•Consumption of chicken in the U.S. is rising every year.

Why?

•Chicken is LOW in fat, HIGH in protein and LOW in cholesterol when compared to meats such as pork and beef.

•There are several breeds of chicken used to produce different products and types of eggs.

Page 8: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Broiler- used mainly for meat. A broiler is a chicken is 6 to 7 weeks of age and weighs 4 pounds when it is sent to market.

Poultry Terms to KnowCLICK PICTURES TO ENLARGE

Layer-a mature female chicken that produces eggs. Most can lay 300 eggs/year.

Pullet- a young female chicken

Page 9: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Poultry Terms to Know

Vertical Integration-raising, processing, and distributing poultry is now one continuous chain. A large company is composed of smaller companies that carry out all the processes from manufacturing to distributing. For example, Con Agra is one large company, but they hire growers, hatcheries, distributors, and processors.

1. Hatchery

2. Growout

3. Processing

4. Distribution

Page 10: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Breeder farm

Eggs are laid by broiler hens (parent flock).

Male chickens are called cockerels and female chickens are called pullets or hens.

Male turkeys are called stags and female turkeys are called hens.

The eggs are collectedand sent to the hatchery.

Page 11: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

HatcheryThe eggs are incubated at the hatchery. They are kept warm, until the chicks start to hatch out of their shells.

Chickens hatch at around 20 days and turkeys hatch at around 27 days.

Baby chickens are called chicks.

Baby turkeys are called poults.

The hatched birds are then sorted and transported to Rearing farms.

Page 12: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Did you know?

When a chick hatches it can live healthily for up to two days without being given any food or water. This is because it still has nutrients in its stomach from when it was inside the egg.

This is why chicks do not need food or water when they are being moved to the rearing farm.

Page 13: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Rearing farmsThe baby birds are reared in special large houses, which provide them with water and a special diet.

These houses are cleaned before each new arrival of baby birds.

Trained staff look after the birds in the houses every day.

If the birds are ill, special medicines aregiven in their food or water.

The birds are reared until they reach their required weight.

Page 14: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

CatchingOnce the birds reach their required weight they are transported to the processing plant.

Trained staff called ‘catchers’ catch the birds and put them in special containers called modules.

Catching is carried out quietly and with care to avoid unnecessary stress and to prevent injury to the birds.

The modules are then loaded into lorries and taken to the processing plant.

Page 15: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Processing PlantHere the birds are processed and packaged.

After the birds have been processed they are weighed, and then either left whole or portioned.

The meat is then packaged and labelled ready to be delivered to restaurants, shops and supermarkets.

Page 16: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

SummaryPoultry includes birds such as chicken, turkey, duck and goose.

A breeder farm, hatchery and rearing farm are all involved in the life cycle of poultry birds.

Hygiene is very important during all parts of poultry farming to prevent diseases.

Page 17: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Today 2,500 local farm families produce almost 600 million chickens.

The chickens are processed and prepared for market in 12 processing plants owned by four of the nation’s top poultry companies.

Page 18: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Start small!

Page 19: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Bring a few chicks home

Page 20: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Put them in your backyard

Page 21: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Give them a little shelter, food and water

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Protect them from predators

Page 23: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Put them in the strawberry patch

Page 24: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

The birds will eat everything else

Page 25: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

They seem to like grass

Page 26: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

When its hot, they like shade

Page 27: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

The “holding cone” keeps them quiet

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The kill is quick

Each bird is held gently, thanked for coming to live with us, and placed in the holding cone. Their throat is cut, they “jerk” for a minute and then bleed out quickly. The next step is

picking off the feathers.

Page 29: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

“30 seconds in hot water

Page 30: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Plucking feathers is followed by cleaning

Page 31: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

When you raise, nurture and kill your own birds,

you really know where they came from.

Page 32: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

EGGCITED ABOUT POULTRY

By: Jennie Simpson and Dr. Frank Flanders

Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Offic

Georgia Departmenf Educat

May 2003

Page 33: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Egg ProducersLayers– Chickens that are raised to produce eggs– Some can lay over 300 eggs/hen/year• White egg producers– Small in size– Eg. White Leghorns- white plumage• Brown egg producers– Larger birds that are not aseconomical as Leghorns– Eg. Rhode Island Reds- dark redplumage

Page 34: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Meat Producers• Chickens used for meat productionare called Broilers• Emphasis placed on the ratio offeed to meat produced• Butchered at a young age• Birds used for meat production areusually commercial crosses– Example: White Plymouth Rockfemales mated to Cornish (Englishclass) males

Page 35: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

PRINCIPLES OF POULTRYHUSBANDRY• Use of good quality and right class of stock• Provision of good housing• Maintanance of good health• Nutrition for economic performance• Good stockpersonship• Maximum use of management techiniqes• Use of records• Good marketing practice

Page 36: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Use of good quality and righttype/class of stock• Use stock known to be of goodquality and of the appropriategenotype for the commodity to beproduced• Select a genotype suited to agiven management situationand/or produces a commoditysuitable for a particular market

Page 37: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

BREEDER FARM SEQUENCEThe breeder farm produces fertile eggs that will behatched in a hatchery according to the followingsequence:• Brooding• Growing• Housing• Mating• Egg collection• Incubation and hatching• Chick sexing• Chick rearing and marketing

Page 38: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Brooding• Male and female chicks areusually reared separatelyuntil about 4-5 weeks ofage.• They are then reared so thatthey can work out who isboss (adjust the peck order).• They are then less likely tofight with one another lateron

Page 39: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Growing• The growing period for layerbreeders is from 5 to 20 weeksof age, about four weeks lessthan for meat breeders.• Feed is restricted to preventfeed wastage and to improveegg production• Restricted feeding begins atabout six weeks of age andcontinues until birds havecommenced laying

Page 40: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Housing• Usually raised on litter floors• Transferred to speciallydesigned breeder sheds, alsowith litter floors, when about18-22 weeks.• Sheds usually divided into smallsections to minimize fighting.• Nests placed so that the hens areattracted to the dark areas of thenest to lay their eggs.

Page 41: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Mating• Cockerels will mate with anumber of hens (about 10%)• Cockerels can be fed a cheaperdiet than hens and it s acommon practice to haveadditional cockerel feeders in ashed placed at a greater heightthan those containing hen feed.

Page 42: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Egg collection• Fertile eggs are collected afterlaying ASAP.• Eggs can be cleaned whencollected by wiping with a drycloth or steel wool.• Fumigation by formaldehydegas is carried out ASAP aftercollection, usually at the farmor sometimes at the hatchery

Page 43: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Incubation and hatching• The first 18 days:– Eggs are placed on special trays which can be tiltedthrough 90 degrees, from side to side in the setter.– The temperature and humidity of the air arecontrolled so that conditions inside each egg aresuitable for the growth and development of thechick.• On the 18th day:– Eggs are transferred to hatchers• On the 21st day:– All chicks have hatched– They are taken to a special room and removedfrom the hatcher tray.– They are then placed in chick boxes ready for

Page 44: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Chick sexing• Layer strain chicks are alwayssexed, as the females are keptwhile the males are killed.• Breeders are usually sexed, asonly one sex of each breederstrain is kept.• Meat chickens are normally leftunsexed, as both sexes areusually reared together

Page 45: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Separation of male and femaleschicks can be done by:• Visual examination, (calledvent sexing) either bychecking the structures in thechick’s vent with the nakedeye or by inspecting theinternal sexual organs with aspecial lamp.• Most breeds can now be sexedby checking the feather colouror the degree of growth ofwing feathers.

Page 46: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Chick keeping and marketing• Transported in chick boxes• Chicks must be kept warmand ventilated• Let chicks eat and drink assoon as possible• Feed and water available tothem at all times.

Page 47: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

LAYER FARM SEQUENCE• Brooding (day-old to 6 weeks)• Growing (6 to 20 weeks)• Adult layer (20 to/up to 78 weeks)• Egg collecting and grading

Page 48: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Brooding (day-old to 6 weeks)• Chicks need someadditional heat up to sixweeks• Chick starter feed richin protein and energy

Page 49: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Growing (6 to 20 weeks)• Feed contains less protein andenergy• Beak trimming• Vaccinations• Restriction to feed supply• Pullets are usually moved intotheir laying quarters, at 16-18weeks of ageAdult

Page 50: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Adult layer (20 to/up to 78weeks)• Adult hens are fedcarefully and kept in ahouse at 21-28oC• Hens can need morenutrients just before andduring their peakproduction than at othertimes èphase feeding.

Page 51: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Layer Cages

Page 52: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Egg collecting and grading• Most eggs are laid in themorning• Collected regularly andtransferred to an egg room tocheck for weight and damagedshells• Separated based on weight byan egg grader.• Packed into cartons for sale

Page 53: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Present Status of the Industry

Page 54: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group
Page 55: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Broiler Production

Page 56: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Egg Production

Page 57: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Turkey Production

Page 58: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Production Figures

Page 59: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Production Figures

Page 60: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

World Poultry Distribution

Page 61: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Retail Price

WashingtoWashington n

D.C.D.C.

Mexico Mexico

CityCityParisParis RomeRome StockhoStockho

lmlmTokyoTokyo

BroileBroilersrs

1.031.03 .55.55 1.341.34 1.831.83 2.862.86 2.262.26

EggsEggs .77.77 .54.54 .84.84 1.291.29 2.302.30 1.741.74

Page 62: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Largest Producersin the world are Chinathe countries of the former

Soviet UnionUnited States

Page 63: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

World chicken population1.China (3,860,000,000)2.United States (1,970,000,000)3.Indonesia (1,200,000,000)4.Brazil (1,100,000,000)5.India (648,830,000) 6.Mexico (540,000,000)7.Russia (340,000,000)8.Japan (286,000,000)9.Iran (280,000,000)10.Turkey (250,000,000)11.Bangladesh (172,630,000)12.Nigeria (143,500,000)

Page 64: Poultry farming By Naveed Akhtar and his Group

Thank You for your kind attention