1. Effect of different LED light colors on welfare, performance, some behavioral patterns, and blood parameters of Muscovy ducks.
- Author
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Hefnawy E, Elgazzar E, Sabek A, El-Laithy S, and Ahmed S
- Subjects
- Animals, Light, Feathers, Immobility Response, Tonic physiology, Body Weight, Male, Animal Husbandry methods, Female, Ducks physiology, Ducks blood, Animal Welfare, Behavior, Animal, Color
- Abstract
Background: The current study was conducted to assess the impact of different LED light colors on welfare indicators in Muscovy ducks. These welfare parameters encompassed growth performance, specific behaviors, tonic immobility (TI), feather score, haematological, and serum biochemical parameters. Eighty-four healthy unsexed Muscovy ducklings aged two weeks were randomly assigned to four groups (3replicates/group; each replicate contains 7 birds) based on different LED light colors. The first group was raised under white light, the second under red light, the third under blue light, and the fourth under yellow light. To assess the impact of various LED light colors on welfare, growth performance indicators (body weight, body weight gain, feed intake, and feed conversion ratio) were measured. Behavioral patterns including feeding, drinking, standing, walking, sitting, feather pecking, and other activities were recorded. Tonic immobility test (TI) and feather condition scoring were conducted at 3, 6, and 10 weeks of age. At the end of the study blood samples were collected for hematological and serum biochemical analyses., Results: The results revealed that using blue, yellow, and red colors had no adverse effect on the final body weight of the ducks (P > 0.05). Unlike to red light, blue light significantly reduced feather pecking, TI time and cortisol concentrations and improved the feather condition score (P ≤ 0.05)., Conclusions: The current findings suggest that the application of blue light effectively improves welfare indices and has no detrimental impact on the growth performance of Muscovy ducks thereby positively contributing to their welfare., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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