Consider ... good or bad, glyphosate has been in the feed for a long time. So, unless a concentration level change made sudden impacts, it seems unlikely that potential general egg laying problems from glyphosate would not have been made evident sooner.Glyphosate, which is in many weed killers, is suspected to cause cancer. Especially in those that use it frequently, such as ground keepers, farmers that use herbicide to spray pasture fences, etc. If it’s in our chicken feed, and that’s their main source of sustenance, especially during the winter months, would it not be plausible that a chicken’s body would have adverse effects? Such as no laying, eggs that are misshapen, (other than the normal misshapen every once in awhile), molts that seem to take longer than usual. You posted that there was a problem with sperm motility. Would that not possibly lower hatch rates, or even chicks born sterile? All of which would disrupt food chain even more.