Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0155339 (
Brown
)
12,436
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1.
ISA
Brown
hens were housed, from 18 to 71 weeks of age, as groups of 4 in cages with 675 cm2/bird. There were 7 treatments: control cages and 6 treatments with perches fitted across the rear of the cage. Five treatments had 450 mm wide cages, with perches made from hardwood, textured metal, smooth plastic, softwood and padded vinyl, and one treatment had a 600 mm wide cage, with a softwood perch. There were 4 cages in each of the first 6 treatments and 6 in the last. 2. Overall, birds spent about 25% of the day time on perches. Most time (28 to 41%) was spent perching on the 600 mm softwood perches. Among 450 mm perches, most time (25 to 30%) was spent on the softwood perch and least (13 to 23%) on the plastic; the results suggested that a slightly rough surface was preferred. Individual birds varied considerably in the proportion of day time they spent perching; this variation was relatively consistent over time. 3. Overall, the proportion of birds roosting on the perches at night was 85% in period 1; declined to 76% by period 6, probably because increased body size made it almost impossible for 4 birds to perch in the 450 mm cages. Birds roosting on the floor tended always to be the same individuals. 4. Damage to the soles of the feet was less in all treatments with perches than in control cages. It was least in 600 mm wide cages and showed a negative correlation with time spent perching, both within and between treatments. Long or twisted claws, in contrast, tended to be slightly worse in treatments where there was most perching. 5. Downgraded eggs tended to be slightly more frequent in cages with perches; the greatest proportion (cracked 1.4%, dirty 3.6%) was from the 600 mm wide cages, as a result of hens laying from the perch and a build-up of manure behind it. 6. Although problems remain the findings suggest that provision of perches is important for the welfare of hens; perch space should be sufficient to allow all birds to perch simultaneously.
...
PMID:Individual perching behavior of laying hens and its effects in cages. 162 13
1. Behavior of
ISA
Brown
hens was compared in cages with and without nest sites provided, to determine the characteristics necessary for such nest sites and whether part of the existing cage area could be modified to form an acceptable nest file. 2. There were 5 treatments: control (C); a wooden surround in one rear corner of the cage (S); a fiberglass rollaway hollow in one rear corner of the cage (H); a hollow and a surround (H/S); a nest box attached to the back of the cage, containing a hollow (N). 3. Use of rollaway hollows was limited, unless they were blocked and wood shavings were added, when 55 to 60% of eggs were laid in them. There were also problems with soiling of hollows. 4. When hollows were blocked, most hens used them in treatments H/S and N, suggesting that substrate and surroundings both contributed to acceptability of nest sites. 5. Pre-laying behaviour in sites within the cage was disturbed and sometimes abnormal. In addition, these sites were not used for other activities, thus limiting the space available. 6. For pre-laying behaviour to be expressed satisfactorily in cages, an additional nesting area, such as a nest box or boxes, is probably necessary.
...
PMID:Behaviour of laying hens in cages with nest sites. 235 81
1.
ISA
Brown
hens were housed as groups of 4 from 18 to 72 weeks in 24 cages 450 mm deep, each with a softwood perch of rectangular cross-section fitted across the rear. There were 4 treatments, each with 6 cages: cage widths and perch lengths were 480, 520, 560 or 600 mm. 2. Daytime perching did not differ significantly between the treatments. At night, over the whole year, 81% of birds in the 480 mm cages and 86% in the 520 mm cages roosted on the perch. This figure reached about 95% in the 560 and 600 mm cages, significantly more at most ages than in the 480 mm cages. 3. Feather damage was slightly less, but claw problems slightly more, in the 2 wider treatments than in the 2 narrower treatments. Birds in the wider cages were calmer when approached or handled by humans than those in the narrower cages. This may have been associated with variation in space allowance between the treatments. 4. There was a trend for lower production in the 480 mm cages than in the other treatments which may have been associated with the reduced feeding space in this treatment. There were few other treatment differences in production traits. 5. The balance of the evidence from this study is that when perches are provided in laying cages for medium weight hybrids, 140 mm of perch space per hen is adequate. For the amelioration of a number of the welfare problems of conventional cages, provision of perches should be combined with other modifications.
...
PMID:Perch length in cages for medium hybrid laying hens. 761 22
The purpose of this study was to determine the presence of epidermal growth factor receptor and its potential ligands epidermal growth factor (EGF) and transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha) in the tissues of the maturing follicles in the ovary of laying
ISA
-
Brown
hens using peptide-specific immunohistochemical methods. Cryostat sections, 6-8 microns thick, were made from fresh-frozen tissues of F1-F4 (largest to fourth largest) and large white follicles and they were immunostained for epidermal growth factor receptor, epidermal growth factor or transforming growth factor alpha using specific polyclonal antibodies. The EGF receptor and both ligands were detected in the granulosa, theca interna and theca externa layers of the follicles. The EGF receptor was localized both in the plasma membrane and cytoplasm of all cell types. EGF was predominantly cytosolic, whereas TGF-alpha was found in the plasma membranes and perinuclear areas of all cell types. The concentration of the receptor and both ligands decreased with follicular maturation. This observation is consistent with our previous observation that the response to EGF and TGF-alpha decreases as follicles mature, and thus provides further evidence that the receptor or the ligands may have a regulatory role in avian ovarian function.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical localization of epidermal growth factor receptors, epidermal-growth-factor-like and transforming-growth-factor-alpha-like peptides in chicken ovarian follicles. 779 7
1. Laying hens (192
ISA
Brown
medium hybrids) were housed from 18 to 72 weeks as groups of 4 in conventional or experimental cages. The main area of all cages provided 675 cm2/hen. All experimental cages had perches, dust baths and nest boxes, which were of three types: litter (L), artificial turf (A) or plastic rollaway (P). These facilities provided an additional 375 to 480 cm2/hen. The nest boxes and dust baths occupied either high or low positions. Behaviour, physical condition and production of the birds were regularly recorded. 2. Mortality was low (1.6% overall) and egg production very good in all treatments. The proportion of cracked and dirty eggs was slightly (but not significantly) higher in the experimental cages. In the experimental cages 90% of eggs were laid overall in the nest boxes and 3% in the dust baths. The proportion laid in the nest boxes was lower early in the laying cycle and increased with time, reaching 99% in A. 3. The facilities were heavily used. Birds spent about 25% of day time on the perches and 10-15% in or near the nest box and dust bath. At night, the majority of birds (90 to 94%) roosted on perches, but most of the remainder were on the lips of the nest box or dust bath, fouling the interiors. 4. Pre-laying behaviour was much more settled in the experimental cages (45 min spent in the eventual laying position) than in the conventional ones (20 min) and total duration varied from 68 min in A to 87 min in P. The number of nest entries varied from 3.0 (A and P) to 4.3 (L); disturbance to sitting birds was correspondingly greater in L. 5. Dust bathing in the experimental cages generally took place during the afternoon in a single bout of about 5 min duration, whereas in the conventional cages it was brief and fragmented (3 bouts of 10 s each). The dust bath was also used for foraging behaviour (pecking and scratching). The treatments with small dust baths (A and P) caused problems for the birds. 6. Feather, foot and claw damage all tended to be less in the experimental than in the conventional cages, though only in the last case was the difference significant. Keel bone depressions appeared to be associated with perches; they were present in 43% of hens in the experimental cages but only 4% in conventional cages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nesting, dust bathing and perching by laying hens in cages: effects of design on behaviour and welfare. 815 22
At 20 wk of age, 315
ISA
Brown
pullets were individually caged and randomly assigned to one of seven feeding regimens for the next 20 wk. In Regimen 1 Diet A was fed, in Regimen 2 Diet B was fed, Regimens 3 and 4 alternated Diets A and B weekly (the week Diet A was fed in Regimen 3, Diet B was fed in Regimen 4), Regimens 5 and 6 alternated Diets A and B monthly (reversing as with 3 and 4), and in Regimen 7 pullets were given a choice of Diets A and B. Diet A was methionine-deficient (.23%) and Diet B was balanced for methionine (.33%). Feed and nutrient consumption, egg production, egg weight, and egg mass were lower in Regimen 1 than 2. Pullets in Regimen 1 lost body weight and those in Regimen 2 gained weight. Overall feed consumption for Regimens 3 through 7 was similar to that for Regimen 2. For Regimens 3 through 6, however, consumption increased when the balanced diet was fed and decreased when the deficient diet was fed. Concomitant with these oscillations in feed consumption were changes in egg mass, so that means for these traits were intermediate and different from those for Regimens 1 and 2. For Regimen 7, in which Diets A and B were continuously available, no preference of diet was observed during the first 4 wk.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Feed intake adjustments by hens to feeding regimens in which dietary methionine is varied. 823 25
Fractures in spent laying hens are now recognised as a major welfare problem; the objective of this work was to determine whether provision of perches for caged layers would increase bone strength, bone volume or both. Sixteen
ISA
Brown
hens were housed from 18 to 72 weeks old in cages with perches and 16 in similar cages without perches. At the end of lay the birds' tibiotarsi were examined for strength by a three-point loading test and their tarsometatarsi for bone volume by histomorphometry. There was no significant effect of perches on tibiotarsal breaking strength. Hens from both groups showed evidence of osteoporosis, but it was more severe in the birds from conventional cages: tarsometatarsal trabecular bone volume was greater in the hens which had access to perches. A positive correlation was found between trabecular bone volume and the degree of day-time perch usage by individual hens. Provision of perches can have a slight but significant beneficial effect, at least for the leg bones, in increasing the bone volume of caged laying hens.
...
PMID:Comparison of bone volume and strength as measures of skeletal integrity in caged laying hens with access to perches. 846 Feb 60
Trabecular bone remodelling is known to be affected by loading or exercise, and thus exercise may effect the trabecular bone loss associated with osteopenia in laying hens. Sixteen
ISA
Brown
hens were housed from 18 to 72 weeks old in cages with perches and 16 in similar cages without perches to examine the effects of the exercise afforded by perch provision on trabecular bone volume. At 72 weeks, mean trabecular bone volume in the proximal tarsometatarsus of birds with access to perches was significantly greater than in control birds, while medullary bone volume was not significantly different in the two groups. However, all the birds were considered osteoporotic, though to varying degrees, and the beneficial effects of perches were relatively minor. It was concluded that while trabecular bone loss may be reduced by perch provision, other factors are probably more influential in the development of the osteoporosis typical of laying hens.
...
PMID:Effects of perches on trabecular bone volume in laying hens. 846 Feb 61
1. Behaviour, production and welfare of
ISA
Brown
medium hybrids were assessed in 2 trials (each from 20 to 44 weeks of age) of a novel design of cage for laying hens: the Edinburgh Modified Cage (EMC). 2. The EMC was 600 mm wide, 450 mm deep and 450 mm high at the rear; it had a softwood perch and at one side a 250 mm wide nest box (containing litter or artificial turf) with a dust bath directly above. It housed 4 birds and provided 675 cm2/bird in the main cage with an additional 281 cm2/bird in the nest box. The nest box and dust bath had automatically controlled doors which were closed at night. There were 18 EMC; in the first trial these were compared with 6 control cages with perch but without next box or dust bath. 3. Hens spent 32 to 37% of day time on the perch, 5 to 7% in the dust bath and 5 to 6% in the nest. At night 92 to 98% roosted on the perch. 4. Initially only 55 to 70% of eggs were laid in the nest box partly because some eggs were laid before dawn. Once the door was retimed to open 3h before lights-on the proportion rose to 91 to 96%. Very few eggs were laid in the dust bath. Pre-laying behaviour lasted longer in treatments with nest boxes (55 to 76min) than in control cages (48min); disturbance was slight in all treatments, but lowest in control cages. 5. Dust baths were well used, with on average 61% of hens dust bathing during a 3-h afternoon observation period compared with only 17% in control cages. Two birds could use the dust bath simultaneously. 6. It was concluded that although a number of minor design features still required attention the EMC has potential to reduce the disadvantages of conventional cages for welfare while retaining their advantages and has possible commercial application.
...
PMID:The Edinburgh modified cage for laying hens. 874 72
1.
ISA
Brown
and Shaver 288 hens, fed ad libitum, were given a 5-h increase or a 2, 5 or 10-h decrease in photoperiod at 215 d of age. Hens of both breeds were also maintained on constant 10, 13 or 18 h photoperiods. Other groups had their photoperiod increased from 8 to 13 h, or were held on constant days but had their access to food limited to 8 h per day. 2. Both breeds on ad libitum feeding exhibited curvilinear rate of lay and egg output, and linear food intake, responses to photoperiod change. Shaver hens reduced their egg output and rate of lay to a greater extent than
ISA
Brown
hens when photoperiod was decreased. 3. In both breeds the beneficial effect on egg production of the 5-h increase in photoperiod was less than the adverse effect of the 5-h decrease. 4. The influence of light change per se generally had a greater effect on performance than the influence of feeding opportunity, but significant effects of changing feeding opportunity were demonstrated. 5. The reduction in mean rate of lay and egg output following a reduction in photoperiod was partly caused by some birds ceasing lay, but all birds showed some decrease in both variates.
...
PMID:Effects of changes in photoperiod and feeding opportunity on the performance of two breeds of laying hen. 877 37
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>