Low Airspeed Impacts on Tom Turkey Response to Moderate Heat Stress

Author:

Uemura Derek1,Regmi Prafulla2,Grimes Jesse3,Wang-Li Lingjuan4ORCID,Shah Sanjay4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nelson Irrigation, Dayton, WA 99328, USA

2. Department of Poultry Science, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA

3. Prestage Department of Poultry Science, NC State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA

4. Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, NC State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA

Abstract

Heat stress is a concern for turkeys in naturally ventilated houses. Chamber and room studies were used to assess heat stress at moderate temperatures (<25 °C) and low airspeeds on grown tom turkeys. In the chamber study, four ventilation rates × two temperatures (thermal comfort and thermal stress, 11 °C above thermal comfort) were applied to 13- to 19-week birds. Very small differences in airspeeds among the four treatments masked subcutaneous, cloacal, and infrared (IR) temperature differences at both temperatures. In the room study, four ventilation rates (0.07 m3·min−1·kg−1 or 100%, 75%, 50%, and 30% or Control) were applied to 21-week toms housed at <23 °C. The Control treatment had significantly higher whole-body and head temperatures vs. the other treatments. Only 100% had higher weight gain vs. 50%; hematology was unaffected by treatment. Higher ventilation rates reduced heat stress due to lower room temperatures, not airspeed differences, which were very low. The low-cost IR camera detected a heat stress difference ≥ 0.8 °C, corresponding to wind chill of 0.8 °C due to an airspeed of 0.8 m·s−1 vs. still air on the USDA broiler wind chill curve. Machine vision combined with IR thermography could alleviate real-time poultry heat stress.

Funder

North Carolina Ag Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Engineering (miscellaneous),Horticulture,Food Science,Agronomy and Crop Science

Reference32 articles.

1. USDA—NASS (2023). Poultry—Production and Value 2022 Summary 04/27/2023.

2. Mintus, Z. (2023, September 01). US Poultry Industry Manual—Turkey Finishing. Available online: https://www.thepoultrysite.com/articles/turkey-finishing#:~:text=Light%20hen%2C%20heavy%20hen%2C%20and,based%20on%20company%20and%20region.

3. Brigano, M. (2023, September 01). Why Tunnel Ventilation Is Not a Reality in Brazil. Available online: https://zootecnicainternational.com/featured/tunnel-ventilation-not-reality-brazil/.

4. Exploring Ventilation Efficiency in Poultry Buildings: The Validation of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) in a Cross-Mechanically Ventilated Broiler Farm;Bustamante;Energies,2013

5. Shah, S.B., Grimes, J., and Singletary, I. (2013). Ventilating to Cool Modern Grower Turkeys, North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service. AG-775.

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