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Roosters are smart when it comes to protecting themselves-most of the time. If a hen is giving them trouble-they tend to know when enough is enough. Although, in the past, my roosters have fallen victim to hens pecking their feathers out.
(Lack of protein) But after they had more protein in their diet, it was really never the same...A rooster will give alot to a hen if it's managable.
My little roo is and was at the time, under a year old. I guessed approx. 7-9 months at the time that he met my girls, because his previous owner didn't quite know his age.
My hens were, at the time, a mix from 5 months to 2 and a half years. I noticed that it was the YOUNGER hens who gave him the most trouble. The bigger girls barely noticed he was there for the most part.
I think there are a lot of reasons why my rooster is picked on. Size is a factor, as is attitude. I think it takes a heck of a rooster to say to hens he doesn't even know, "Okay, ladies, step aside. I can take it from here." Mr. Rooster submits to them, good for me, because then he knows his place is under my influence. In the past, aggressive roosters have been at the top of the pecking order and have hurt me or my family members.
Will the hens ever respect a new rooster? Perhaps. Every rooster is different, IMO. I think that eventually, every rooster will gain dominance over a various number of hens. In the past, my dominant roos (only bantams, mind you) have been under at least one hen. My Roxy wouldn't give up her rule for anything. I've never had a rooster that was number one. But being 'number one' is totally different than being the man of the coop.
He can still proect them without having a 'crown' to prove himself. And I think, to some degree, every rooster will protect his hens, as instinct suggests.
But I would still keep him in a protected area alongside the hens for a while, so they can meet each other. Throwing a new rooster to the lion's den is a good way to lose some trust. When I took my rooster to meet hens for the first time, I made sure that when he got pecked, I'd tap the beak of the hen who did it so he knew that I made the rules, as did the hen. Then vice versa if he did the same to a hen more than once. But I always made sure he knew his place and knew that I would still protect him if need be.