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Effect of species-specific sound stimulation on the development and hatching of broiler chicks
Authors:Q Tong  I M McGonnell  C E B Romanini  H Bergoug  N Roulston  V Exadaktylos
Institution:1. Department of Production and Population Health, Royal Veterinary College, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, UK;2. Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, London, UK;3. Division M3-BIORES: Measure, Model &4. Manage Bioresponses, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;5. Anses/Unit of Epidemiology and Welfare in Poultry and Rabbit Farming, Ploufragan, France;6. Research and Development, Petersime N.V., Zulte (Olsene), Belgium
Abstract:1. Previous research has reported that chicken embryos develop a functionary auditory system during incubation and that prenatal sound may play an important role in embryo development and alter the hatch time. In this study the effects of prenatal auditory stimulation on hatch process, hatch performance, the development of embryo and blood parameters were investigated.

2. Four batches of Ross 308 broiler breeder eggs were incubated either in control or in sound-stimulated groups. The sound-stimulated embryos were exposed to a discontinuous sound of species-specific calls by means of a speaker at 72 dB for 16 h a day: maternal calls from d 10 to d 19 of incubation time and embryo/chick calls from d 19 until hatching. The species-specific sound was excluded from the control group.

3. The onset of hatch was delayed in the sound-stimulated group compared to the controls. This was also supported by comparison of the exact hatching time of individual focal chicks within the two groups. However, the sound-stimulated embryos had a lower hatchability than the control group, mainly due to significantly increased numbers of late deaths.

4. The embryos exhibited a similar growth pattern between the sound-stimulated group and the control group. Although sound exposure decreased body weight at d 16, no consistent effect of sound on body weight at incubation stage was observed. Species-specific sound stimulation also had no impact on chick quality, blood values and plasma corticosterone concentrations during hatch.

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