Every egg tells a story.
Changes in the shape, color, texture, or strength of the shell may be early signs of nutritional problems, stress, disease, or reproductive system disorders.
Learning to interpret these signs allows you to take action before more serious problems arise in the chicken coop.
A good habit of any as a poultry breeder and enthusiast, it’s important to observe your birds, paying close attention to their external anatomy as well as their movements and behaviors, since they are gregarious animals. All of this will help us determine the health of our hens.
Whether they’re happy or sad, lethargic, stressed, or have a certain comb color; whether they’re doing well and have no issues with their legs, feathers, or a whole host of other characteristics specific to the breed or breeds we keep in our chicken coops or barns.
Problems with shell quality are usually caused by a combination of factors, rather than a single isolated issue. The factors that most affect shell quality are:
1. The race: With genetic selection, and potential influences with other traits.
2. Age: The thickness of the eggshell decreases as the hen ages; the weight of the egg increases, while that of the shell remains the same.
3. Shedding: Productivity depends on the type and severity of the molting that has taken place, as well as the age of the hens.
4. Stress: In general, for example, the population density and the heat, because of the impact on consumption.
5. Some diseases: as the Newcastle, infectious bronchitis, EDS, etc
6. Production systems: Cage-raised chickens, compared to free-range chickens, under both conventional and intermittent lighting regimes.
7. Nutrition: Including
to. The quality of the water: electrolyte, bacterial load...
b. Some trace minerals: electrolytes (Na, Cl), acid-base balance, and Zn and Mn, which act as cofactors (metal ions and organic molecules) in shell formation.
c.. Contribution of major minerals: Ca: P interaction with age, Ca particle size, intestinal Ca solubility, the Ca:P ratio, the diet, and carbonate derived from blood bicarbonate or from synthesis, from CO₂ via the action of carbonic anhydrase (an enzyme belonging to a family of metalloenzymes that catalyzes the rapid conversion of carbon dioxide and water to bicarbonate and protons) in the oviduct.
The intensity of the brown color on the eggshell depends on the quality of the pigment deposited in the cuticle.
Causes:
All or part of the shell is tainted by feces. Should be avoided, to ration ingredients that produce bowel movement moist and sticky.
Causes:
The extended or smear, blood, are more common in the eggs of the cocks, at the start of the position.
These eggs are contaminated with the blood of the cloaca prolapsed, by cannibalism or pecking at the cloaca.
Causes:
This problem can range from very fine cracks to cracks that form in the eggshell.
Causes:
These are eggs that appear with a shell incomplete. A thin layer of calcium is deposited on the membrane of the shell.
Causes:
Small lumps of material calcified in the shell. The size of the granulation, depends on the foreign material present in the calcification process.
Causes:
White spots, irregular in shape and size, on the surface of the shell.
Causes:
Similar to the white spots, but with pigment in coffee.
Causes:
The egg is cracked in the gland of the shell, then repairs before the posture.
Causes:
Wrinkled eggs have a misshapen shell surface with fine cracks.
Causes:
The egg oblate is the second egg into the bag. The second egg is not as full as the first, and is flattened at the point of contact.
Causes:
These eggs are the result of two eggs that come in contact in the bag of the gland of the shell. At this point interrupted the calcification normal and the first egg is retained and will have a layer of extra calcium, with the appearance of a white strip.
Causes:
Guide of the most common problems, in the Eggshells from chickens PDF Spanish
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