Effect of cold stress on performance and immune responses of Bedouin and White Leghorn hens

M Spinu, AA Degen - British Poultry Science, 1993 - Taylor & Francis
M Spinu, AA Degen
British Poultry Science, 1993Taylor & Francis
Bedouin chickens are kept in deserts mainly for eggs and are well adapted to arid
conditions. However, deserts are also characterised by relatively cold winter nights. As a
consequence of cold stress there is an involution of lymphoid organs and a depression of
immunological function. We compared the performance and immunological responses of
Bedouin and White Leghorn hens kept in outdoor pens in the Negev Desert during the
winter. 2. Initial mean body mass was similar for the two breeds: 1525 g for Bedouin hens …
Abstract
1. Bedouin chickens are kept in deserts mainly for eggs and are well adapted to arid conditions. However, deserts are also characterised by relatively cold winter nights. As a consequence of cold stress there is an involution of lymphoid organs and a depression of immunological function. We compared the performance and immunological responses of Bedouin and White Leghorn hens kept in outdoor pens in the Negev Desert during the winter.
2. Initial mean body mass was similar for the two breeds: 1525 g for Bedouin hens and 1542 g for White Leghorn hens. White Leghorns lost 7–74 g/d, compared with 0.60 g/d for Bedouin hens and produced 0.36 eggs/d, compared with 0.54 eggs/day for Bedouin hens.
3. The heterophil/lymphocyte ratio for Bedouin hens was 0.28, which was lower than the 0.44 for White Leghorn hens. Phagocytic index was higher in Bedouin hens than in White Leghorns. Furthermore, wattle index measured 24, 48 and 72 h after PHA injections and anti‐SRBC antibody titres determined 10 d after challenge were also higher in Bedouin hens than in White Leghorns.
4. We concluded that the Bedouin hens were less stressed by the cold than were the White Leghorn hens.
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