good day
too late for all this stuff for me
Jeff
too late for all this stuff for me
Jeff
Last edited:
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https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/656836/january-incubation-seminar-meetup-video
Incubation seminar by Dr. Keith Bramwell from the University of Arkansas speaking on breeding and incubation. He speaks at length regarding how long sperm cells remain viable within a hen. Research shows that it is about 21 days. However after about 14 days there tends to be increased embryonic death. He explains much more. Very good information.
Can you post a study or two on this?
"After removal of the male, the average duration of fertility was found to be 10.7 days by Curtis and Lambert, 14.8 days by Nicolaides. The high records here are 29 and 32 days recorded by Nicolaides and Crew, respectively. In practice, poultrymen recognize that, a week after removal of the male, fertility is declining so rapidly that only special curcumstances warrant saving eggs longer than 12 or 14 days.
It is important to know how soon one male is replaced by another the influence of the first will be lost so that all or most of the fertile eggs can be attributed to the second sire [...] in such cases the influence of the first male is lost in 7 to 10 days and frequently in as little as 3 to 5 days. Furthermore, once the second male's sperm begin to fertilize eggs on any one hen, few of them, if any, are subsequently fertilized by the first male [...] it seems clear that 7 to 10 days are ample as an interim when one male replaces another" Hutt, F. B., The Genetics of the Fowl , pg 450.
In explaining how the author did tests at his university:
"Transfers of the males are arranged to accommodate weekly settings of eggs on Tuesday. To illustrate, Shift 1 goes out of the breeding pens on Friday afternoon and is replaced on Sunday in the late afternoon. Eggs laid on Monday night are credited to Shift 1, but eggs on Tuesday to Saturday, when paternity is doubtful, are marketed. Beginning on the following Sunday, eggs are saved for incubation and credited to Shift 2, this being 7 days after the introduction of these cockerels and nine days after the removal of Shift 1." (521).
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/656836/january-incubation-seminar-meetup-video
Incubation seminar by Dr. Keith Bramwell from the University of Arkansas speaking on breeding and incubation. He speaks at length regarding how long sperm cells remain viable within a hen. Research shows that it is about 21 days. However after about 14 days there tends to be increased embryonic death. He explains much more. Very good information.
Those youngsters are positively glowing with good health, Lual. Good job !
Those youngsters are positively glowing with good health, Lual. Good job !