Hello Everyone,
I have been somewhat of more than a lurker than a poster lately. But I do love following the egg incubation threads and seeing everyone's new hatches !
Now, I see this more than ever, people saying how they go in & "help" there chicks out of the egg
Isn't this going to ruin poultry GENETICS in the future. Now I realize if you help a chick out, you ARE saving THAT chick! Yay, congratulations, but, if you keep breeding chicks who need help out, were going to run into a problem somewhere down the line right?
I do a lot of incubating year long, mostly for other people. I have had hens kick out eggs that are alive and look perfectly good, and leave the chicks to die! They MUST know something is wrong with the chick that we don't. I think the same thing applies to incubation. I have had hatches with all eggs make it to lockdown, with perfect temperature and humidity, and have terrible hatches. I would rather leave the chick to die in the egg and have a bad hatch, than have a good hatch with all chicks needing assistance. I have read posts of this same side, people saying eventually through selection your hatch rates will rise as you select for birds who 's eggs have better hatch rate.
I have done some reading myself on it, in the genetics of the fowl, it says, of the 21 lethal genes known to date in fowl, at least 16 are fatal to some or all homozygotes during incubation, and the other 5 exert themselves after hatching. pg. 456 So, you could be helping getting these genes into the future, along with even lower hath rates. Some fatal genes are Crooked Neck Dwarf, Blindness, Bilateral Microphthalmia ( total blindness, often found in chicks dying late in incubation)
So, I will change my opinion if you can show me the literature to help chicks out. But for now, I urge you to incubate more, with lower hatch rates, and SELECT for higher hatch rates.
I would really love to hear YOUR opinions, in a KIND Discussion !
Thanks
Mark
I have been somewhat of more than a lurker than a poster lately. But I do love following the egg incubation threads and seeing everyone's new hatches !


Isn't this going to ruin poultry GENETICS in the future. Now I realize if you help a chick out, you ARE saving THAT chick! Yay, congratulations, but, if you keep breeding chicks who need help out, were going to run into a problem somewhere down the line right?
I do a lot of incubating year long, mostly for other people. I have had hens kick out eggs that are alive and look perfectly good, and leave the chicks to die! They MUST know something is wrong with the chick that we don't. I think the same thing applies to incubation. I have had hatches with all eggs make it to lockdown, with perfect temperature and humidity, and have terrible hatches. I would rather leave the chick to die in the egg and have a bad hatch, than have a good hatch with all chicks needing assistance. I have read posts of this same side, people saying eventually through selection your hatch rates will rise as you select for birds who 's eggs have better hatch rate.
I have done some reading myself on it, in the genetics of the fowl, it says, of the 21 lethal genes known to date in fowl, at least 16 are fatal to some or all homozygotes during incubation, and the other 5 exert themselves after hatching. pg. 456 So, you could be helping getting these genes into the future, along with even lower hath rates. Some fatal genes are Crooked Neck Dwarf, Blindness, Bilateral Microphthalmia ( total blindness, often found in chicks dying late in incubation)
So, I will change my opinion if you can show me the literature to help chicks out. But for now, I urge you to incubate more, with lower hatch rates, and SELECT for higher hatch rates.
I would really love to hear YOUR opinions, in a KIND Discussion !
Thanks
Mark