Using Analysis of Variance to compare biochemical blood and productive Parameters of two Broiler chicken | ||
Egyptian Poultry Science Journal | ||
Volume 45, Issue 3, September 2025, Pages 351-361 PDF (596.21 K) | ||
Document Type: Original Article | ||
DOI: 10.21608/epsj.2025.404135.1331 | ||
Author | ||
Habiba Hassan Rezk* | ||
poultry production,agriculture faulty, ain shams | ||
Abstract | ||
As the poultry industry has grown in recent years, it has become necessary to assess various broiler strains so as to increase production efficiency while taking physiological and productive traits such as (live body weight, body weight gain, feed intake, total protein, albumin, triglycerides, cholesterol, HDL, LDL, phosphorus, calcium, superoxide dismutase, ALT, and AST). Consequently, the purpose of the current study was to compare blood parameters and productive performance of two chickens strains (Ross and Arbo Acres) broiler strains. Two strains were fed the same commercial diet broiler ad libitum (starter and grower diet), and body weight and body weight gain were weekly recorded, Feed consumption and feed conversion ratio were calculated at the end of the experiment, also blood samples were collected randomly through venipuncture (eight samples from Ross and Arbo Acres broiler chicken). A one-way ANOVA test was applied to compare the overall (p < 0.01) of blood parameters across groups, the present findings indicated that Ross strain was significantly better than Arbo Acres strain .The mean weekly live body weight was highly significant in two broiler chicken (p<0.01). Ross (1970) had a significantly (p<0.001) greater mean final LBW (kg/bird) than Arbo Acres (1750). Mean total body weight gain (g/bird) was high significantly (p<0.01) in Ross (1926) than in Abo acres (1708). The findings demonstrated that the overall feed intake and feed conversion ratio were significantly impacted by the chicken strain. The total feed intake values were 650and 537g/bird in 14 day of age, and 2325and 2653g/bird in 28 day of age, as well as the FCR values were 1.32and 1.05in 14 day of age, and 1.32 and 1.34g feed/g gain in 28 day of age for Arbo Acres and Ross, respectively. In conclusion, the results showed that broiler chickens' physiology and productivity are significantly influenced by their strains. Ross outperformed the Arbo Acres strains of live body weight, body weight gain and feed consumption | ||
Keywords | ||
Broiler chickens; Blood; analysis statistical; body weight and feed conversion | ||
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