Chicken Hatching
By: Edward • Research Paper • 1,847 Words • March 15, 2010 • 840 Views
Chicken Hatching
Experiment:
Chicken Hatching
Background Information
Some facts about chickens
A chicken is a bird. One of the features that differentiate it from most other birds is
that it has a comb and two wattles. The comb is the red appendage atop the head, and the
wattles are the two appendages under the chin. These are secondary sexual characteristics
and are much more prominent in the male. The comb is the basis of the Latin name or
classification of chickens. In Latin, gallus means comb, and the domestic chicken is Gallus
domesticus. The Red Jungle Fowl, ancestor of most domestic chickens, is Gallus bankiva.
There are eight recognized kinds of combs: single, rose, pea, cushion, buttercup,
strawberry, V-shaped, and silkie.
The chicken has two legs and two wings, a fact that influences housing and
management. Heavy breeds used for meat production cannot do more than flap their
wings and jump to a little higher level or move more rapidly along the ground. he chicken
has pneumatic bones, making its body lighter for flying, although most domestic chickens
have lost the ability to do so. The lighter-bodied birds can fly short distances, and some
can fly over relatively high fences.
The chicken's temperature is about 107 degrees to 107.5 degrees F.
Chickens have comparatively short life spans. Some live to be 10 to 15 years old,
but they are an exception. In commercial egg production, birds are about 18 months old
when they are replaced by new, young stock. It takes close to six months for a female
chicken to mature sexually and start laying eggs. Then, they are kept for 12 to 14 months
of egg production. After that their economic value declines rapidly, so they are disposed
of when they are about 18 months old.
Chickens and Eggs in the Economy
Poultry and eggs are a comparatively cheap food of high nutritional quality.
Value of production (in billions of dollars)
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
Poultry and Egg 15.0 16.9 17.8 18.7 19.5
Broilers 9.2 11.0 11.4 11.8 12.2
Eggs 3.4 3.3 3.7 4.1 4.4
Turkeys 2.4 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9
Chickens 0.083 0.076 0.086 0.080 0.084
Consumption Per Person
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
Eggs (No.) 255 236 237 235 236
Chickens (lbs.) 58 70.3 71.5 70.3 71.6
Turkey (lbs.) 12 17.9 18.0 17.9 18.5
Total poultry (lbs.) 70 88.2 89.5 88.2 90.1
Beef (lbs.) 79 65.1 67.5 67.4 67.7
Pork (lbs.) 62 52.4 53.1 49.1 49.1
Lamb, mutton, veal (lbs.) 3 2.2 2.1 1.9 2.3
Total red meat (lbs.) 144 119.8 122.7 118.4 119.1
Total Consumption
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
No. layers (million) 270 265 260 258 250
No. eggs (billion) 70.6 74.2 74.0 73.9 73.7
Broilers (billion) 6.4 6.8 7.0 7.3 7.5
Turkeys (million) 269 287 289 293 297
Information on Eggs
Value of eggs
Food prices continue to climb,