Occasionally one comes across a chicken with one or more toes that are twisted along the toe's length. A bit like this image I found online:
Mostly the bending is less extreme. My question is simply whether the chicken in question suffers when they have feet like this?
If I were to guess, my answer would be "yes". With any bird, the toes have to withstand pressure form back to front, either when they walk or when they perch. With chickens, the toes have to withstand this pressure a thousandfold more than in the average bird, since chickens scratch.
Now, it seems to me that the joints in a bird toe is a so called hinge joint, i.e. a joint that's meant to bend in only one direction, and consequently, built to withstand substantial pressure from only one direction. Like the human knee. It can withstand great pressure from the back or front, but put pressure on the knee from either side, and injury and pain is likely.
A chicken with a bent toe will, when scratching, subject the toe joints to pressure from the side of the joint. So I believe that in the long run, that chicken will be more likely than the average chicken to experience joint pain.
It's extremely hard to gauge the pain a chicken feels (it will probably keep scratching the soil even it it's painful for it). That being said, does anyone have an answer to my question? Or perhaps some intelligent speculation?
The question is relevant, since it matters when one decides whether to cull or not.
Mostly the bending is less extreme. My question is simply whether the chicken in question suffers when they have feet like this?
If I were to guess, my answer would be "yes". With any bird, the toes have to withstand pressure form back to front, either when they walk or when they perch. With chickens, the toes have to withstand this pressure a thousandfold more than in the average bird, since chickens scratch.
Now, it seems to me that the joints in a bird toe is a so called hinge joint, i.e. a joint that's meant to bend in only one direction, and consequently, built to withstand substantial pressure from only one direction. Like the human knee. It can withstand great pressure from the back or front, but put pressure on the knee from either side, and injury and pain is likely.
A chicken with a bent toe will, when scratching, subject the toe joints to pressure from the side of the joint. So I believe that in the long run, that chicken will be more likely than the average chicken to experience joint pain.
It's extremely hard to gauge the pain a chicken feels (it will probably keep scratching the soil even it it's painful for it). That being said, does anyone have an answer to my question? Or perhaps some intelligent speculation?
The question is relevant, since it matters when one decides whether to cull or not.