Thank you. But, if the keel bone does not indicate whether or not a bird is fat, then why do we persist in using it as the primary indicator? So, what does it mean to be "fat"? Maybe the whole keel bone thing should be abandoned in favor of something else.
We seem to make the same mistake with people. In humans, modern medicine uses the Body Mass Index which is just the individual's weight divided by height.. It is widely used by doctors in spite of known deficiencies in that it does not differentiate between body fat and muscle mass. Likewise, the keel bone test is measuring breast meat muscle mass and does not consider fat accumulations under the skin.
Whatever means we use to measure fatness, the solution might be the same.... diet and exercise. How would a chicken do on a Keto Diet?