Difference between revisions of "Chicken" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Chickens}}<br />{{Template:StatusDomesticated}}
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{{Claimed}}
{{Taxobox_image | image = [[image:Bantam_Rooster.jpg|225px|A Bantam rooster]] | caption = A Bantam rooster}}
 
{{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
 
{{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Animal]]ia}}
 
{{Taxobox_phylum_entry | taxon = [[Chordate|Chordata]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[Aves]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_ordo_entry | taxon = [[Galliformes]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_familia_entry | taxon = [[Phasianidae]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = ''[[Gallus (biology)|Gallus]]''}}
 
{{Taxobox_species_entry | taxon = '''''G. gallus'''''}}
 
{{Taxobox_subspecies_entry | taxon = '''''G. g. domesticus'''''}}
 
{{Taxobox_end_placement}}
 
{{Taxobox_section_binomial_parens | color = pink | binomial_name = Gallus gallus | author = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = [[1758]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_end}}
 
  
A '''chicken''' (''Gallus gallus domesticus'') is a type of domesticated [[bird]] which is often raised as a type of [[poultry]]. It is believed to be descended from the wild Indian and south-east Asian [[Red Junglefowl]].
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{{Taxobox | name = Chicken | color = pink
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| status        = {{StatusDomesticated}}
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| image        = Rooster04 adjusted.jpg  <!-- was 'Bantam Rooster.jpg' —>
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| image_width  = 300px
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| image_caption = A Rooster (male chicken)
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| regnum        = [[Animal]]ia
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| phylum        = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
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| classis      = [[Bird|Aves]]
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| ordo          = [[Galliformes]]
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| familia      = [[Phasianidae]]
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| genus        = ''[[Junglefowl|Gallus]]''
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| species      = ''[[Red Junglefowl|G. gallus]]''
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| author        = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]]
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| date          = [[1758]]
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}}
  
Chickens are the most commonly found bird in the world. The population in 2003 was 24 billion, according to the ''Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds''. They provide two sources of food frequently consumed by humans: their meat, also known as chicken, and [[egg (food)|eggs]].
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The '''chicken''' (''Gallus gallus'') is a type of [[domestication|domesticated]] [[fowl]], believed to be descended from the wild [[India]]n and south-east Asian [[Red Junglefowl]].
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The chicken is one of the most common and wide-spread [[domestic animals]]. With a population of more than 24 billion in 2003,<ref>according to the ''Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds''</ref> there are more chickens in the world than any other bird. Humans keep chickens primarily as a source of food, from both their [[Chicken (food)|meat]] and their [[egg (food)|eggs]].
  
 
==General biology and habitat==
 
==General biology and habitat==
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[[Image:Day old chick black background.jpg|thumb|200px||left|A day-old chick]]
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Chickens generally live five to eleven years depending on the breed <ref>http://www.ruleworks.co.uk/cgi-bin/TUfaq.exe?Guide=Poultry&Category=Poultry%20-%20General#q9</ref>. Male chickens are known as [[rooster]]s (in the U.S., Canada and Australia); in the UK they are known as cocks when over one year of age, or cockerels when under one year of age<ref>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cockerel</ref>.  Castrated roosters are called [[capon]]s. Female chickens over a year old are known as hens. Young females under a year old are known as [[pullet]]s<ref>http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/pullet</ref>. Roosters can usually be differentiated from hens by their striking plumage, marked by long flowing tails and bright pointed feathers on their necks.
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However, in some breeds, such as the Sebright, the cock only has slightly pointed neck feathers, and the identification must be made by looking at the comb. Chickens have a fleshy crest on their heads called a [[cockscomb|comb or cockscomb]], and a fleshy piece of hanging skin under their beak called a [[wattle (anatomy)|wattle]].  These organs help to cool the [[bird]] by redirecting blood flow to the skin. Both the male and female have distinctive wattles and combs. In males, the combs are often more prominent, though this is not the case in all varieties.
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Domestic chickens are typically fed commercially prepared feed that includes a [[protein]] source as well as [[Cereal|grain]]s. Chickens often scratch at the soil to search for insects and seeds. Incidents of [[cannibalism]] can occur when a curious bird pecks at a preexisting wound or during fighting (even among female birds). This is exacerbated in close quarters. In commercial egg and meat production this is controlled by trimming the beak (removal of two thirds of the top half and occasionally one third of the lower half of the beak).
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Domestic chickens are not capable of long distance flight, although they are generally capable of flying for short distances such as over fences. Chickens will sometimes fly to explore their surroundings, but usually do so only to flee perceived danger. Because of the risk of escape, chickens raised in open-air pens generally have one of their wings clipped by the breeder &mdash; the tips of the longest feathers on one of the wings are cut, resulting in unbalanced flight which the bird cannot sustain for more than a few meters.
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Chickens are gregarious birds and live together as a [[herd|flock]]. They have a communal approach to the [[avian incubation|incubation]] of eggs and raising of young. Individual chickens in a flock will dominate others, establishing a "[[pecking order]]," with dominant individuals having priority for access to food and nesting locations. Removing hens or roosters from a flock causes a temporary disruption to this social order until a new pecking order is established.
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Chickens will try to lay in nests that already contain eggs, and have been known to move eggs from neighbouring nests into their own. Some farmers use fake eggs made from plastic or stone to encourage hens to lay in a particular location. The result of this behavior is that a flock will use only a few preferred locations, rather than having a different nest for every bird.
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Hens can also be extremely stubborn about always laying in the same location. It is not unknown for two (or more) hens to try to share the same nest at the same time. If the nest is small, or one of the hens is particularly determined, this may result in chickens trying to lay on top of each other.
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[[Image:Rooster crowing.jpg|thumb|Rooster crowing during daylight hours]]
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Contrary to popular belief, roosters do not crow only at dawn, but may crow at any time of the day or night. Their crowing - a loud and sometimes shrill call - is a territorial signal to other roosters. However, crowing may also result from sudden disturbances within their surroundings.
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In 2006, scientists researching the ancestry of birds "turned on" a chicken [[recessive gene]], ''talpid2'', and found that the embryo jaws initiated formation of teeth, like those found in ancient bird fossils. John Fallon the overseer of the project stated that chickens have "...retained the ability to make teeth, under certain conditions..."<ref>[http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=1666805 Scientists Find Chickens Retain Ancient Ability to Grow Teeth] Ammu Kannampilly, ABC News, [[2006-02-27]]. Retrieved [[2007-10-01]].</ref>
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== Courting ==
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When a rooster finds food he may call the other chickens to eat it first. He does this by clucking in a high pitch as well as picking up and dropping the food. This behavior can also be observed in mother hens, calling their chicks. In some cases the rooster will drag the wing opposite the hen on the ground, while circling her. This is part of chicken courting ritual. When a hen is used to coming to his "call" the rooster may mount the hen and proceed with the fertilization.
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==Going broody== 
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[[Image:Chicken eggs.jpg|thumb|left|Chicken eggs vary in color depending on the hen, typically ranging from bright white to shades of brown and even blue, green, and recently reported purple (found in South Asia) (Araucana varieties).]]
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Sometimes a hen will stop laying and instead will focus on the incubation of eggs, a state that is commonly known as ''going broody''. A broody chicken will sit fast on the nest, and protest or peck in defense if disturbed or removed, and will rarely leave the nest to eat, drink, or dust bathe. While brooding, the hen maintains constant temperature and humidity, as well as turning the eggs regularly.
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At the end of the incubation period, which is an average of 21 days, the eggs (if fertilized) will hatch, and the broody hen will take care of her young. Since individual eggs do not all hatch at exactly the same time (the chicken can only lay one egg approximately every 25 hours), the hen will usually stay on the nest for about two days after the first egg hatches. During this time, the newly-hatched chicks live off the egg yolk they absorb just before hatching. The hen can sense the chicks peeping inside the eggs, and will gently cluck to stimulate them to break out of their shells. If the eggs are not fertilized by a rooster and do not hatch, the hen will eventually lose interest and leave the nest.
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Modern egg-laying breeds rarely go broody, and those that do often stop part-way through the incubation cycle. Some breeds, such as the [[Cochin (chicken)|Cochin]], [[Cornish (chicken)|Cornish]] and [[Silkie (chicken)|Silkie]], regularly go broody and make excellent maternal figures. Chickens used in this capacity are known as utility chickens.
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==Artificial incubation==
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Chicken egg incubation can successfully occur artificially as well. Nearly all chicken eggs will hatch after 21 days of good conditions - 99.5 °[[Fahrenheit|F]] (37.5°[[Celsius|C]]) and around 55% [[relative humidity]] (increase to 70% in the last three days of incubation to help soften egg shell). Many commercial incubators are industrial-sized with shelves holding tens of thousands of eggs at a time, with rotation of the eggs a fully automated process.
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Home incubators are usually large boxes ([[lead]] incubators are popular) and hold a few to 75 eggs. Eggs must be turned three to eight times each week, rotating at least 180 degrees. If eggs aren't turned, the [[embryo]] inside will stick to the shell and likely will be hatched with physical defects. This process is natural; hens will stand up three to five times a day and shift the eggs around with their [[beak]].
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[[Image:Eggess.JPG|thumb|200px|A free range egg (left) next to a battery egg (right).]]
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==Chickens as food==
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{{main|Chicken (food)}}
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The [[meat]] of the chicken, also called "chicken," is a type of poultry. Because of its relatively low cost among meats, chicken is one of the most used meats in the world.  Nearly all parts of the bird can be used for food, and the meat is cooked in many different ways around the world.  Popular chicken dishes include [[fried chicken]], [[chicken soup]], [[Buffalo wings]], [[tandoori chicken]], [[butter chicken]], and [[Hainanese chicken rice|chicken rice]].  Chicken is also a staple of [[fast food]] restaurants such as [[KFC]], [[McDonald's]], and [[Burger King]]. Chicken has a fairly neutral flavor and texture, and is used as a reference point for describing other foods; many are said to '[[Tastes like chicken|taste like chicken]]' if they are indistinctive.
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==Chickens as pets==
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Chickens can make good [[companion animal]]s and can be tamed by hand feeding, but can sometimes become aggressive. Some have advised against keeping certain breeds around young children{{Fact|date=April 2007}}, as the chickens can become territorial and violent. In [[Asia]], chickens with striking plumage have long been kept for ornamental purposes, including feather-footed varieties such as the [[Cochin (chicken)|Cochin]] from [[Vietnam]], the [[Silkie]] from [[China]], and the extremely long-tailed [[Phoenix chicken|Phoenix]] from [[Japan]]. Asian ornamental varieties were imported into the [[United States]] and [[Great Britain]] in the late 1800s. Distinctive American varieties of chickens have been developed from these Asian breeds. Poultry fanciers began keeping these ornamental birds for exhibition, a practice that continues today.
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While some cities in the [[United States]] allow chickens as pets, the practice is not approved in all localities. The so called [[urban hen movement]] harks back to the days when chicken keeping was much more common, and involves the keeping of small groups of hens in areas where they may not be expected, such as closely populated cities and suburban areas. Individuals in rural communities commonly keep chickens for both ornamental and practical value.  Some communities ban only roosters, allowing the quieter hens.  [[Zoo]]s sometimes use chickens instead of [[insecticide]]s to control [[insect]] populations.
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Chickens are generally low maintenance. The major challenge is protecting the birds from predators such as [[dog]]s, [[raccoon]]s and [[fox]]es. Chickens are usually kept in a [[roost]] at night and a pen in the day (unless they are [[free-range]]). The floor is covered with bedding such as straw or wood shavings. A bird left out at night is likely to be killed by a predator.
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Eggs from household chickens can be quite different from the commercial eggs. Fresh [[yolk]]s are "perky" and float above the white. The yolk color is frequently a deeper color than the pale [[yellow]] of commercially raised eggs and can at times be almost [[Orange (colour)|orange]].
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==Chickens in agriculture==
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[[Image:Chickens drinking.jpg|left|250px|thumb|[[Free range]] chickens]]
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In the [[United States]], chickens were raised primarily on family [[farm]]s until roughly 1960. Originally, the primary value in poultry keeping was eggs, and meat was considered a byproduct of egg production. Its supply was less than the demand, and poultry was expensive. Except in hot weather, eggs can be shipped and stored without refrigeration for some time before going bad; this was important in the days before widespread refrigeration.
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Farm flocks tended to be small because the hens largely fed themselves through foraging, with some supplementation of grain, scraps, and waste products from other farm ventures. Such feedstuffs were in limited supply, especially in the winter, and this tended to regulate the size of the farm flocks. Soon after poultry keeping gained the attention of agricultural researchers (around 1896), improvements in nutrition and management made poultry keeping more profitable and businesslike.
  
[[Image:White leghorn chicken.JPG|thumb|200px|right|White [[Leghorn chicken]]]]
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Prior to about [[1910]], chicken was served primarily on special occasions or Sunday dinner. Poultry was shipped live or killed, plucked, and packed on ice (but not [[Disembowelment|eviscerated]]). The "whole, ready-to-cook broiler" wasn't popular until the [[Fifties]], when  end-to-end refrigeration and sanitary practices gave consumers more confidence. Before this, poultry were often cleaned by the neighborhood [[butcher]], though cleaning poultry at home was a commonplace kitchen skill.
Male chickens are known as [[rooster]]s (in the U.S., Canada and Australia), cocks, or cockerels if they are young. Female chickens are known as hens, or 'chooks' in Australasian English. Young females are known as pullets. Roosters can usually be differentiated from hens by their striking plumage, marked by long flowing tails and bright pointed feathers on their necks.
 
  
However in some breeds, such as the Seabright, the cock only has slightly pointed neck feathers, and the identification must be made by looking at the comb.  Chickens have a fleshy crest on their heads called a comb and a fleshy piece of hanging skin under their beak called a wattle. These organs help to cool the bird by redirecting bloodflow to the skin.  Both the male and female have distinctive wattles and combs.  In males, the combs are often more prominent, though this is not the case in all varieties.
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Two kinds of [[poultry]] were generally used: broilers or "spring chickens;" young male chickens, a byproduct of the egg industry, which were sold when still young and tender (generally under 3 pounds live weight), and "stewing hens," also a byproduct of the egg industry, which were old hens past their prime for laying. <ref>"The Dollar Hen", [[Milo Hastings]], (1909)</ref> This is no longer practiced; modern meat chickens are a different breed. Egg-type chicken carcasses no longer appear in stores.
  
Chickens can make loving and gentle companion animals.
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The major milestone in 20th century poultry production was the discovery of vitamin D, which made it possible to keep chickens in confinement year-round. Before this, chickens did not thrive during the winter (due to lack of sunlight), and egg production, incubation, and meat production in the off-season were all very difficult, making poultry a seasonal and expensive proposition. Year-round production lowered costs, especially for broilers.  
  
Chickens are [[omnivore]]s and will feed on small seeds, herbs and leaves, grubs, insects and even small mammals if they can get them. Domestic chickens are typically fed commercially prepared feed that includes a protein source as well as grains.  Chickens often scratch at the soil to get at adult insects and larva or seed.  Incidents of [[cannibalism]] can occur when a curious bird pecks at a pre-existing wound or from over-crowding.  This is exacerbated in close quarters.  In commercial production this is controlled with chick "[[debeaking]]" (removal of 2/3 of the top half and 1/3 of the lower half of the beak). Some free range farms currently prefer small lenses which fit over the beak and block out red light from the eye.
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At the same time, egg production was increased by scientific breeding. After a few false starts (such as the Maine Experiment Station's failure at improving egg production<ref>"The Dollar Hen", [[Milo Hastings]], (1909)</ref>, success was shown by Professor Dryden at the Oregon Experiment Station<ref>Dryden, James. Poultry Breeding and Management. Orange Judd Press, 1916.</ref>.
  
Domestic chickens are not capable of flying for long distances, although they are generally capable of flying for short distances such as over fences. Chickens will sometimes fly simply in order to explore their surroundings, but will especially fly in an attempt to flee when they perceive danger. Because of the risk of flight, chickens raised in the open air generally have one of their wings clipped by the breeder &mdash; the tips of the longest feathers on one of the wings are cut, resulting in unbalanced flight which the bird cannot sustain for more than a few meters. ([http://www.omlet.co.uk/chickenguide/guide.php?cat_selected=Chicken%20Care&sub_selected=wing%20clipping more on wing clipping])
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Improvements in production and quality were accompanied by lower labor requirements. In the [[Thirties]] through the early Fifties, 1,500 hens was considered to be a full-time job for a farm family. In the late Fifties, egg prices had fallen so dramatically that farmers typically tripled the number of hens they kept, putting three hens into what had been a single-bird cage or converting their floor-confinement houses from a single deck of roosts to triple-decker roosts. Not long after this, prices fell still further and large numbers of egg farmers left the business. This marked the beginning of the transition from family farms to larger, vertically integrated operations.
  
[[Image:Chicken eggs.jpg|thumb|250px|Chicken [[egg (food)|eggs]] vary in color depending on the hen, typically ranging from bright white to shades of brown and even blue or green (Araucana varieties).]]
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Robert Plamondon<ref>http://www.plamondon.com</ref> reports that the last family chicken farm in his part of Oregon, Rex Farms, had 30,000 layers and survived into the [[Nineties]]. But the standard laying house of the surviving operations is around 125,000 hens.
Chickens are gregarious birds and live together as a [[herd|flock]]. They have a communal approach to the incubation of eggs and raising of young.  Individual chickens in a flock will dominate others, establishing a "pecking order", with dominant individuals having priority for access to food and nesting locations.  Removing hens or roosters from a flock causes a temporary disruption to this social order until a new pecking order is established.
 
  
Chickens will try to lay in nests that already contain eggs, and have been known to move eggs from neighbouring nests into their own. Some farmers use fake eggs made from plastic or stone to encourage hens to lay in a particular location. The result of this behaviour is that a flock will use only a few preferred locations, rather than having a different nest for every bird.
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This fall in profitability was accompanied by a general fall in prices to the consumer, allowing poultry and eggs to lose their status as luxury foods.
  
Hens can also be extremely stubborn about always laying in the same location. It is not unknown for two (or more) hens to try to share the same nest at the same time. If the nest is small, or one of the hens is particularly determined, this may result in chickens trying to lay on top of each other.
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The [[vertical integration]] of the egg and poultry industries was a late development, occurring after all the major technological changes had been in place for years (including the development of modern broiler rearing techniques, the adoption of the Cornish Cross broiler, the use of laying cages, etc.).
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By the late Fifties, poultry production had changed dramatically. Large farms and packing plants could grow birds by the tens of thousands. Chickens could be sent to [[slaughterhouse]]s for [[butcher]]ing and processing into prepackaged commercial products to be frozen or shipped fresh to markets or wholesalers. Meat-type chickens currently grow to market weight in six to seven weeks whereas only fifty years ago it took three times as long.<ref>Havenstein, G.B., P.R. Ferket, and M.A. Qureshi, 2003a.  Growth, livability, and feed conversion of [[1957]] versus [[2001]] broilers when fed representative 1957 and 2001 broiler diets.  Poult. Sci. 82:1500-1508</ref> This is due to genetic selection and nutritional modifications (and not the use of growth hormones, which are illegal for use in poultry in the US and many other countries). Once a meat consumed only occasionally, the common availability and lower cost has made chicken a common meat product within developed nations. Growing concerns over the [[cholesterol]] content of [[red meat]] in the 1980s and 1990s further resulted in increased consumption of chicken.
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Today, eggs are produced on large egg ranches on which environmental parameters are controlled. Chickens are exposed to artificial light cycles to stimulate egg production year-round. In addition, it is a common practice to induce [[molt]]ing through manipulation of light and the amount of food they receive in order to further increase egg size and production.
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On average, a chicken lays one egg a day for a number of days (a "clutch"), then does not lay for one or more days, then lays another clutch. Originally, the hen presumably laid one clutch, became broody, and incubated the eggs. Selective breeding over the centuries has produced hens that lay more eggs than they can hatch. Some of this progress was ancient, but most occurred after 1900. In 1900, average egg production was 83 eggs per hen per year. In 2000, it was well over 300.  
  
Contrary to popular belief, roosters may crow at anytime of the day or night.  Their crowing  - a loud and sometimes shrill call - is a territorial signal to other roosters. However, crowing may also result from sudden disturbances within their surroundings.
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In the United States, laying hens are butchered after their second egg laying season. In Europe, they are generally butchered after a single season. The laying period begins when the hen is about 18-20 weeks old (depending on breed and season). Males of the egg-type breeds have little commercial value at any age, and all those not used for breeding (roughly fifty percent of all egg-type chickens) are killed soon after hatching. The old hens also have little commercial value. Thus, the main sources of poultry meat 100 years ago (spring chickens and stewing hens) have both been entirely supplanted by meat-type broiler chickens.
  
Chickens are domesticated descendants of the [[red junglefowl]], which is biologically classified as the same species.
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[[Image:2004chicken.PNG|thumb|right|250px|Chicken headcount in 2004]]
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Traditionally, chicken production was distributed across the entire agricultural sector. In the Twentieth Century, it gradually moved closer to major cities to take advantage of lower shipping costs. This had the undesirable side effect of turning the chicken manure from a valuable fertilizer that could be used profitably on local farms to an unwanted byproduct. This trend may be reversing  itself due to higher disposal costs on the one hand and higher fertilizer prices on the other, making farm regions attractive once more.
  
Recent studies [http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,185704,00.html] have shown that chickens (and possibly other bird species) still retain the genetic blueprints to produce teeth in the jaws, although these are dormant in living animals. These are a holdover from primitive birds such as ''[[Archaeopteryx]]'', which were descended from [[theropod]] [[dinosaur]]s.
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From the farmer's point of view, eggs used to be practically the same as currency, with general stores buying eggs for a stated price per dozen. Egg production peaks in the early spring, when farm expenses are high and income is low. On many farms, the flock was the most important source of income, though this was often not appreciated by the farmers, since the money arrived in many small payments. Eggs were a farm operation where even small children could make a valuable contribution.
  
== Courting ==
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===Distribution===
When a rooster finds food he may call the other chickens to eat it first. He does this by clucking in a high pitch as well as picking up and dropping the food. In some cases the rooster will drag the wing opposite the hen on the ground, while circling her. This is part of chicken courting ritual. When a hen is used to coming to his "call" the rooster may mount the hen and fertilize her egg.
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[[FAO]] reports that China was the top chicken market in 2004 followed by the USA.
  
==Going broody==
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==Issues with mass production==
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:chicken_mix.jpeg|thumb|right|Chicken mix-breed rooster]] —>
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===Humane treatment===
[[Image:Broody hen.JPG|thumb|right|180px|A broody hen guarding her eggs]]
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[[Image:Industrial-Chicken-Coop.JPG|thumb|350px|[[Industrial agriculture|Battery]] chickens]]
Sometimes a hen will stop laying and instead will focus on the incubation of eggs, a state that is commonly known as ''going broody''. A broody chicken will sit fast on the nest, and protest if disturbed or removed, and will rarely leave the nest to eat, drink, or dust bathe. While broody, the hen keeps the eggs at a constant temperature and humidity, as well as turning the eggs regularly.
 
  
At the end of the incubation period, which is an average of 21 days, the eggs (if fertilized) will hatch, and the broody hen will take care of her young. Since individual eggs do not all hatch at exactly the same time (the chicken can only lay one egg approximately every 25 hours), the hen will usually stay on the nest for about two days after the first egg hatches. During this time, the newly-hatched chicks live off the egg yolk they absorb just before hatching. The hen can hear the chicks peeping inside the eggs, and will gently cluck to encourage them to break out of their shells. If the eggs are not fertilized and do not hatch, the hen will eventually grow tired of being broody and leave the nest.
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[[Animal welfare]] groups have frequently targeted the poultry industry for engaging in practices which they believe to be inhumane. Many animal welfare advocates object to killing chickens for food, the "[[factory farming|factory farm conditions]]" under which they are raised, methods of transport, and slaughter. [[PETA]] and other groups have repeatedly conducted undercover investigations at chicken farms and slaughterhouses which they allege confirm their claims of cruelty. <ref>http://www.kentuckyfriedcruelty.com/u-cok.asp</ref>
  
Modern egg-laying breeds rarely go broody, and those that do often stop part-way through the incubation cycle. Some breeds, such as the [[Cochin (chicken)|Cochin]], [[Cornish (chicken)|Cornish]] and [[Silkie (chicken)|Silkie]], regularly go broody and make excellent mothers.
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Laying hens are routinely [[debeaking|debeaked]] to prevent fighting. Because beaks are sensitive, trimming them without anaesthesia is considered inhumane by some. It is also argued that the procedure causes life-long discomfort. Conditions in intensive chicken farms may be unsanitary, allowing the proliferation of diseases such as [[salmonella]] and [[E coli]]. Chickens may be raised in total darkness.
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Rough handling and crowded transport during various weather conditions and the failure of existing stunning systems to render the birds unconscious before slaughter have also been cited as welfare concerns.
  
==Artificial incubation==
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Another animal welfare concern is the use of [[selective breeding]] to create heavy, large-breasted birds, which can lead to crippling leg disorders and heart failure for some of the birds. Concerns have been raised that companies growing single varieties of birds for eggs or meat are increasing their susceptibility to disease.  
Chicken egg [[incubation]] can successfully occur artificially as well. Nearly all chicken eggs will hatch after 21 days of good conditions - 98-100 degrees [[fahrenheit]] (38°[[Celsius|C]]) and around 55% [[relative humidity]] (increase to 70% in the last three days of incubation to help soften egg shell.){{Citationneeded}} Many commercial incubators are industrial sized with shelves holding tens of thousands of eggs at a time, with rotation of the eggs a fully automated process.  
 
  
Home incubators are usually small boxes ([[styrofoam]] incubators are popular) and hold 50 eggs. Eggs must be turned three to five times each day, rotating at least 90 degrees. If eggs aren't turned, the [[embryo]] inside will stick to the shell and likely will be born with physical defects. This process is natural: hens will stand up three to five times a day and shift the eggs around with their [[beak]].
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Some groups who advocate for more humane treatment of chickens, claim that they are intelligent. Chickens can be trained to bowl,{{Fact|date=October 2007}} play a toy piano{{Fact|date=October 2007}} or play tic-tac-toe.{{Fact|date=October 2007}} Dr. Chris Evans of [[Macquarie University]] claims that their range of 20 calls, problem solving skills, use of representational signalling, and the ability to recognize each other by facial features demonstrate the intelligence of chickens.[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/11/15/nhen15.xml].
  
==Chickens as food==
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In 2004, 8.9 billion chickens were slaughtered in the United States. <ref>http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/reports/nassr/poultry/ppy-bb/</ref> There is no federal law that regulates the humane treatment of chickens.
{{main|chicken (food)}}
 
  
==Chickens as pets==
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===Human concerns===
In [[Asia]], chickens with striking plumage have long been kept for [[ornamental]] purposes, including feather-footed varieties such as the [[Cochin (chicken)|Cochin]] and [[Silkie]] from [[China]] and the extremely long-tailed [[Phoenix (chicken)|Phoenix]] from [[Japan]]. Asian ornamental varieties were imported into the [[United States]] and [[Great Britain]] in the late 1800s. Poultry fanciers then began keeping these ornamental birds for exhibition, a practice that continues today.   From these Asian breeds, distinctive [[United States|American]] varieties of chickens have been developed.
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====Antibiotics====
 +
Antibiotics have been used on poultry in large quantities since the Forties, when it was found that the byproducts of antibiotic production, fed because the antibiotic-producing mold had a high level of vitamin B12 after the antibiotics were removed, produced higher growth than could be accounted for by the vitamin B12 alone. Eventually it was discovered that the trace amounts of antibiotics remaining in the byproducts accounted for this growth.<ref>Ewing, Poultry Nutrition, 5th ed., 1963, p. 1283.</ref>
  
Today, some cities in the [[United States]] still allow residents to keep live chickens as pets, although the practice is quickly disappearing. Individuals in [[rural]] communities commonly keep chickens for both [[ornamental]] and practical value. Some communities ban only roosters, allowing the quieter [[hens]]. Many zoos use chickens instead of [[insecticides]] to control insect populations.
+
The mechanism is apparently the adjustment of intestinal flora, favoring "good" bacteria while suppressing "bad" bacteria, and thus the goal of antibiotics as a growth promoter is the same as for probiotics. Because the antibiotics used are not absorbed by the gut, they do not put antibiotics into the meat or eggs.<ref>Ewing, Poultry Nutrition, 5th ed., 1963, p. 1284.</ref>
  
Growing chickens can easily be  tamed  by feeding them a special treat such as [[mealworms]] in the palm of one's hand, and by being with them for at least ten minutes daily when they are young.
+
Antibiotics are used routinely in poultry for this reason, and also to prevent and treat disease. Many contend that this puts humans at risk as bacterial strains develop stronger and stronger resistances. <ref>http://dwb.unl.edu/Teacher/NSF/C10/C10Links/www.sierraclub.org/cafos/toolkit/antibiotic.asp</ref> Critics point out that, after six decades of heavy agricultural use of antibiotics, opponents of antibiotics must still make arguments about theoretical risks, since actual examples are hard to come by. Those antibiotic-resistant strains of human diseases whose origin is known originated in hospitals rather than farms.
  
A former recurring [[skit]] on weekly comedy show [[Saturday Night Live]] featured a Chicken [[pet store]] with the chinese owner (as played by [[Dana Carvey]]) not wishing to sell to customer's on the basis that "Chickens make bad house pets."
+
A proposed bill in the American congress would make the use of antibiotics in animal feed legal only for therapeutic (rather than preventative) use, but it has not been passed yet. <ref>http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/food/animal-feed-and-the-food-supply-105/chicken-arsenic-and-antibiotics/index.htm</ref>  However, this may present the risk of slaughtered chickens harboring pathogenic bacteria and passing them on to humans that consume them.
  
==Chickens in agriculture==
+
In [[October 2000]], the [[FDA]] discovered that two antibiotics were no longer effective in treating diseases found in factory-farmed chickens; one antibiotic was swiftly pulled from the market, but the other, [[Baytril]] was not. [[Bayer]], the company which produced it, contested the claim and as a result, Baytril remained in use until [[July]] of [[2005]]. <ref>http://www.mindfully.org/Farm/2005/Baytril-Antibiotic-Banned29jul05.htm</ref>
[[Image:Chicken - melbourne show 2005.jpg|thumb|250px|A chicken at the 2005 Royal Melbourne Show]]
 
  
In the United States, chickens were once raised primarily on the family farm.   Prior to about 1930, chicken was served primarily on special occasions or on Sunday as the birds were typically more valued for their eggs than meat.   Excess roosters or non-productive hens would be culled from the flock first for butchering.  As cities developed and markets sprung up across the nation, live chickens from local farms could often be seen for sale in crates outside the market, to be butchered and cleaned onsite by the [[butcher]].  
+
====Arsenic====
 +
Chicken feed can also include [[Roxarsone]], an [[antimicrobial]] drug that also promotes growth.  The drug has generated controversy because it contains the element [[arsenic]], which can cause [[cancer]], [[dementia]], and [[neurological]] problems in humans.  Yet the arsenic in Roxarsone is not of the type which has been linked to cancer. A Consumer Reports study in [[2004]] reported finding "no detectable arsenic in our samples of muscle" but found "A few of our chicken-liver samples has an amount that according to EPA standards could cause neurological problems in a child who ate 2 ounces of cooked [[liver]] per week or in an adult who ate 5.5 ounces per week." However, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the organization responsible for the regulation of foods in America, and all samples tested were "far less than the... amount allowed in a food product." <ref>http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/food/animal-feed-and-the-food-supply-105/chicken-arsenic-and-antibiotics/index.htm</ref>
  
With the advent of [[refrigeration]], poultry production changed dramatically. Large farms and packing plants emerged that could grow birds by the thousands. Adult chickens could be sent to factories for butchering and processing into pre-packaged commercial products to be frozen or shipped fresh to markets or wholesalers.   Large farms or factories could be established devoted solely to egg production and [[packaging]]. Once a meat consumed only occasionally, the common availability has made chicken a common and significant meat product within developed nations. Growing concerns over [[cholesterol]] in the 1980s and 1990s further resulted in increased consumption.
+
====Growth hormones====
 +
Chickens grow much more rapidly than they once did and some consumers have concluded that this rapid growth is due to the use of hormones in these animals. Some consumers believe that the increasingly earlier onset of [[puberty]] in humans is the result of the liberal use of such hormones.  However, hormone use in poultry production is illegal in the United States. <ref>http://www.fda.gov/cvm/hormones.htm</ref> Similarly, no chicken meat for sale in Australia is fed hormones. <ref>http://www.abc.net.au/landline/stories/s543233.htm</ref> Furthermore, several scientific studies have documented the fact that chickens grow rapidly because they are bred to do so. <ref>http://ps.fass.org/cgi/content/abstract/82/10/1509</ref>
 +
<ref>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=7877935&dopt=Abstract</ref> A small producer of natural and organic chickens confirmed this assumption:
  
Similarly, egg production also changed with the development of automation and refrigeration. Today, eggs are grown on factory farms in highly controlled settings.  Special varieties of chickens are fed special [[diet (nutrition)|diet]]s high in [[calcium]] and [[protein]] to stimulate maximum egg production.  Chickens are exposed to artificial [[light cycle]]s to stimulate egg production year-roundIn addition, it is a common practice to force chickens to [[molt]] through the careful manipulation of light and the amount of food they receive in order to further increase egg production.
+
{{cquote|If this were 1948, you might have something to worry about. Using hormones to boost egg production was a brief fad in the [[Forties]], but was abandoned because it didn't work. Using hormones to produce soft-meated roasters was used to some extent in the Forties and Fifties, but the increased growth rates of broilers made the practice irrelevant—the broilers got as big as anyone wanted them to get when they were still young enough to be soft-meated without chemicals.
 +
   
 +
The only hormone that was ever used in any quantity on poultry (DES) was banned in 1959, after everyone but a few die-hard farmers had given them up as a silly idea.  Hormones are now illegal in poultry and eggs. The people who advertise "No hormones" are either woefully ignorant or are indulging in cynical fear-mongering, maybe both.[http://www.plamondon.com/faq_myths.html]|}}
  
Often, people in Third World Countries keep chickens for their produce, meat and for their company.
+
====''E.coli''====
 +
[[Image:Chickenfamily.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A free roaming [[Bantam (chicken)|bantam]] chicken family of [[rooster]], hen and six [[chick]]s as seen on the streets of downtown [[Key West, Florida]]]]
  
== Issues with mass production ==
+
According to [[Consumer Reports]], "1.1 million or more Americans [are] sickened each year by undercooked, tainted chicken."  A [[United States Department of Agriculture|USDA]] study discovered [[E.Coli]] in 99% of supermarket chicken, the result of chicken butchering not being a sterile process. Feces tend to leak from the carcass until the evisceration stage, and the evisceration stage itself gives an opportunity for the interior of the carcass to receive intestinal bacteria. (So does the skin of the carcass, but the skin presents a better barrier to bacteria and reaches higher temperatures during cooking). Before 1950, this was contained largely by not eviscerating the carcass at the time of butchering, deferring this until the time of retail sale or in the home. This gave the intestinal bacteria less opportunity to colonize the edible meat. The development of the "ready-to-cook broiler" in the Fifties added convenience while introducing risk, under the assumption that end-to-end refrigeration and thorough cooking would provide adequate protection. E. Coli can be killed by proper cooking times, but there is still some risk associated with it, and its near-ubiquity in commercially-farmed chicken is troubling to some. Irradiation has been proposed as a means of sterilizing chicken meat after butchering.
Many animal advocates object to killing chickens for food or to the [[factory farming|factory farm conditions]] under which they are raised. Commercial chicken production often involves raising the birds in large, crowded [[rearing shed]]s that prevent the chickens from engaging in many of their natural behaviours. However, surprisingly, in 2004, 8.9 billion chickens were slaughtered in the United States[http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/reports/nassr/poultry/ppy-bb/].
 
  
Although many would argue that the birds are unintelligent and thus not a high priority to treat humanely in farms, a woman once brought a chicken on ''The Tonight Show with Jay Leno'' where it played "Mary Had A Little Lamb" on a toy piano and bowled 3 strikes. Animal rights groups such as [[PETA]] see this and other "amazing" trained chickens as evidence that they are intelligent and sentient and should not be killed or eaten [http://www.peta.org/factsheet/files/FactsheetDisplay.asp?ID=99].
+
====Avian influenza====
 +
There is also a risk that the crowded conditions in many chicken farms will allow [[avian influenza]] to spread quickly.  A [[United Nations]] press release states: "Governments, local authorities and international agencies need to take a greatly increased role in combating the role of factory-farming, commerce in live poultry, and wildlife markets which provide ideal conditions for the virus to spread and mutate into a more dangerous form..." <ref>http://www.farmsanctuary.org/newsletter/Avain_flu.htm</ref>
  
Another [[animal welfare]] issue is the use of genetic selection to create heavy, large-breasted birds, which can lead to crippling leg disorders and heart failure for some of the birds.  In addition, many scientists have raised concerns that companies growing one variety of bird for eggs or meat are causing them to become much more susceptible to disease. For this reason, many scientists are promoting the conservation of heritage breeds to retain genetic diversity in the species.
+
====Efficiency====
 +
Farming of chickens on an industrial scale relies largely on high protein feeds derived from [[soybean]]s; in the European Union the soybean dominates the protein supply for animal feed<ref>http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5019e/y5019e03.htm#bm03</ref>, and the poultry industry is the largest consumer of such feed<ref>http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5019e/y5019e03.htm#bm03</ref>. Giving the feed to chickens means the protein reaches humans with a much lower efficiency than through direct consumption of soybean products. Some nutrients, however, are present in chicken but not in the soybean.
  
 
==Chicken diseases==
 
==Chicken diseases==
[[Image:Mother hen with chicks.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Hen with newly hatched chicks.]]
+
[[Image:Chikies 17apr06.jpg|thumb|200px|Baby chicks in a box]]
[[Image:Day old chick black background.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Day old chick]]
+
Chickens are susceptible to several [[parasite]]s, including [[lice]], [[mite]]s, [[tick]]s, [[flea]]s, and [[Roundworm|intestinal worm]]s, as well as other diseases.  (Despite the name, they are not affected by [[Chickenpox]]; that is a disease of humans, not chickens.)
*[[Aspergillosis]]
 
*[[Avian influenza]] (bird flu) - most well-known chicken-related disease
 
*[[Blackhead disease]]
 
*[[Botulism]]
 
*[[Cage Layer Fatigue]]
 
*[[Coccidiosis]]
 
*[[Common cold|Cold]]s
 
*[[Crop bound]]
 
*[[Egg bound]]
 
*[[Erysipelas]]
 
*[[Fatty Liver Hemorrhagic Syndrome]]
 
*[[Fowl Cholera]]
 
*[[Fowl pox]]
 
*[[Fowl Typhoid]]
 
*[[Gapeworms]]
 
*[[Infectious Bronchitis]]
 
*[[Infectious Bursal Disease]] ([[Gumboro]])
 
*[[Infectious Coryza]]
 
*[[Lymphoid Leucosis]]
 
*[[Marek's disease]]
 
*[http://poultryone.com/articles/mites.html Mites]
 
*[[Moniliasis]]
 
*[[Mycoplasmas]]
 
*[[Newcastle disease]]
 
*[[Necrotic Enteritis]]
 
*[[Omphalitis]] (Mushy chick disease)
 
*[http://poultryone.com/articles/feedinghens.html Prolapse] (in egg layers)
 
*[[Psittacosis]]
 
*[[Pullorum]] ([[Salmonella]])
 
*[[Scaly leg]]
 
*[[Squamous cell carcinoma]]
 
*[[Tibial dyschondroplasia]]
 
*[[Toxoplasmosis]]
 
*[[Ulcerative Enteritis]]
 
 
 
Chickens are also susceptible to [[parasite]]s, including [[lice]], [[mite]]s, [[tick]]s, [[flea]]s, and [[Roundworm|intestinal Worm]]s.
 
  
[[Chickenpox]] is a disease of humans, not chickens.
+
Some of the common diseases that affect chickens are shown below:
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
| style="background: lightgray;" | '''Name'''
 +
| style="background: lightgray;" | '''Common Name'''
 +
| style="background: lightgray;" | '''Caused by'''
 +
|-
 +
|[[Aspergillosis]]
 +
|
 +
|fungi
 +
|-
 +
|[[Avian influenza]]
 +
|bird flu
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[[Blackhead disease|Histomoniasis]]
 +
|Blackhead disease
 +
|protozoal parasite
 +
|-
 +
|[[Botulism]]
 +
|
 +
|toxin
 +
|-
 +
|[[Cage Layer Fatigue]]
 +
|
 +
|mineral deficiencies, lack of exercise
 +
|-
 +
|[[Coccidiosis]]
 +
|
 +
|parasites
 +
|-
 +
|[[Common cold|Cold]]s
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[http://www.budgie-parakeets.com/cropbound.html Crop Bound]
 +
|
 +
|improper feeding
 +
|-
 +
|[[Egg bound]]
 +
|
 +
|oversized egg
 +
|-
 +
|[[Erysipelas]]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Fatty Liver Hemorrhagic Syndrome]]
 +
|
 +
|high-energy food
 +
|-
 +
|[http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153-10370_12150_12220-26650—,00.html Fowl Cholera]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Fowl pox]]
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[http://epix.hazard.net/topics/animal/ftyphoid.htm Fowl Typhoid]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Gallid herpesvirus 1]]<br>or Infectious Laryngotracheitis
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[[Gapeworm]]
 +
|Syngamus trachea
 +
|worms
 +
|-
 +
|[http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/PS039 Infectious Bronchitis]
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[[Infectious Bursal Disease]]
 +
|Gumboro
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[http://www.peafowl.org/ARTICLES/15/ Infectious Coryza]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Lymphoid Leucosis]]
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[[Marek's disease]]
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[[Moniliasis]]
 +
|Yeast Infection<br>or Thrush
 +
|fungi
 +
|-
 +
|[[Mycoplasmas]]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria-like organisms
 +
|-
 +
|[[Newcastle disease]]
 +
|
 +
|virus
 +
|-
 +
|[http://www.thepoultrysite.com/diseaseinfo/101/necrotic-enteritis Necrotic Enteritis]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Omphalitis]]
 +
|Mushy chick disease
 +
|umbilical cord stump
 +
|-
 +
|[http://poultryone.com/articles/feedinghens.html Prolapse]
 +
|
 +
|
 +
|-
 +
|[[Psittacosis]]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Salmonella|Pullorum]]
 +
|Salmonella
 +
|bacteria
 +
|-
 +
|[[Scaly leg]]
 +
|
 +
|parasites
 +
|-
 +
|[[Squamous cell carcinoma]]
 +
|
 +
|cancer
 +
|-
 +
|[[Tibial dyschondroplasia]]
 +
|
 +
|speed growing
 +
|-
 +
|[[Toxoplasmosis]]
 +
|
 +
|protozoal parasite
 +
|-
 +
|[http://www.merckvetmanual.com/mvm/index.jsp?cfile=htm/bc/201500.htm Ulcerative Enteritis]
 +
|
 +
|bacteria
 +
|}
  
 
==Chickens in religion==
 
==Chickens in religion==
In India, the Rooster is an insignia of Karthikeya, son of Lord Shiva, the God of Destruction. Karthikeya is known by his popular names of Murugan and Subrahmanya in the southern part of the country.
+
[[Image:Huehner.jpg|thumb|200px|Chickens, [[Indonesia]]]]
  
[[Image:Huehner.jpg|thumb|Chickens, [[Indonesia]]]]
+
In [[Indonesia]] the chicken has great significance during the [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[cremation]] ceremony. A chicken is considered a channel for [[evil spirit]]s which may be present during the ceremony. A chicken is tethered by the [[leg]] and kept present at the ceremony for its duration to ensure that any evil spirits present during the ceremony go into the chicken and not the family members present. The chicken is then taken home and returns to its normal life.
In Indonesia the chicken has great significance during the Hindu cremation ceremony. A chicken is a channel for evil spirits which may be present during the ceremony. A chicken is tethered by the leg and kept present at the ceremony for the duration to ensure that any evil spirits present during the ceremony go into the chicken and not the family members present. The chicken is then taken home and returns to its normal life. It is not treated in any special way or slaughtered after the ceremony.
 
  
In ancient Greece, the chicken was not normally used for sacrifices, perhaps because it was still considered an exotic animal. Because of its valour, cocks are found as attributes of [[Ares]], [[Heracles]] and [[Athena]]. The Greeks believed that even lions were afraid of cocks.  Several of [[Aesop's Fables]] reference this belief.
+
In [[ancient Greece]], the chicken was not normally used for sacrifices, perhaps because it was still considered an exotic animal. Because of its valour, the cock is found as an attribute of [[Ares]], [[Heracles]], and [[Athena]]. The alleged last words of [[Socrates]] as he died from [[hemlock]] poisoning, as recounted by [[Plato]], were "[[Crito]], I owe a cock to [[Asclepius]]; will you remember to pay the debt?", signifying that [[death]] was a cure for the illness of life.
  
In the cult of [[Mithras]], the cock was a symbol of the divine light and a guardian against evil.
+
The Greeks believed that even [[lion]]s were afraid of cocks. Several of [[Aesop's Fables]] reference this belief. In the cult of [[Mithras]], the cock was a symbol of the divine light and a guardian against evil.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
  
In the [[Bible]], [[Jesus]] prophesied the betrayal by [[Peter]]: "And he said, I tell thee, Peter, the cock shall not crow this day, before that thou shalt thrice deny that thou knowest me." ([[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 22:43) Thus it happened (Luke 22:61), and Peter cried bitterly. This made the cock a symbol for both vigilance and betrayal.  
+
In the [[Bible]], [[Jesus]] prophesied the betrayal by [[Peter]]: "Jesus answered, 'I tell you, Peter, before the rooster crows today, you will deny three times that you know me.'" ([[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 22:34) Thus it happened ([[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 22:61), and Peter cried bitterly. This made the cock a symbol for both vigilance and betrayal.
  
Earlier, Jesus compares himself to a mother hen, when talking about [[Jerusalem]]: "How often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!" ([[Gospel of Matthew|Matthew]] 23:37; also Luke 13:34).
+
Earlier, Jesus compares himself to a mother hen when talking about [[Jerusalem]]: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing." ([[Gospel of Matthew|Matthew]] 23:37; also Luke 13:34).
  
In many Central European folk tales, the devil is believed to flee at the first crowing of a cock.
+
In many [[Central Europe]]an [[folk tale]]s, the [[devil]] is believed to flee at the first crowing of a cock.
  
In some sects of [[Orthodox Judaism]] a chicken is slaughtered on the afternoon before [[Yom Kippur]] (Day of Atonement) in a ceremony called [[kappores]].  Although not actually a sacrifice in the biblical sense, the death of the chicken reminds the penitent sinner that his or her life is in God's hands.  A woman brings a hen to be slaughtered, a man brings a rooster.  The meat is donated to the poor.
+
In traditional [[Orthodox Judaism|Jewish]] practice, a chicken is swung around the head and then slaughtered on the afternoon before [[Yom Kippur]], the Day of Atonement, in a ritual called [[kapparos]].  The sacrifice of the chicken is to receive atonement, for the bird takes on all the person's sins in kapparos. The meat is then donated to the poor. A [[woman]] brings a hen for the ceremony, while a [[man]] brings a rooster. Although not actually a sacrifice in the biblical sense, the death of the chicken reminds the penitent sinner that his or her life is in [[God]]'s hands.  
  
The [[Talmud]] speaks of learning "courtesy toward one's mate" from the rooster. This might refer to the fact that, when a rooster finds something good to eat, he calls his hens to eat first.
+
The [[Talmud]] speaks of learning "courtesy toward one's mate" from the rooster. This might refer to the fact that when a rooster finds something good to eat, he calls his hens to eat first.
  
The chicken is one of the Zodiac symbols of the [[Chinese calendar]]. Also in [[Chinese religion]], a cooked chicken as a religious offering is usually limited to ancestor veneration and worship of village deities. Vegetarian deities such as Buddha are not one of the recipients of such offerings. Under some observations, an offering of chicken is present with "serious" prayer (while roasted pork is offered during a joyous celebration).
+
The chicken is one of the [[Zodiac]] symbols of the [[Chinese calendar]]. Also in [[Chinese religion]], a cooked chicken as a religious offering is usually limited to ancestor veneration and worship of village deities. [[Vegetarian]] deities such as the [[Buddha]] are not one of the recipients of such offerings. Under some observations, an offering of chicken is presented with "serious" prayer (while roasted [[pork]] is offered during a joyous celebration). In [[Confucian]] Chinese [[Wedding]]s, a chicken can be used as a substitute for one who is seriously ill or not available (e.g sudden death) to attend the ceremony. A red [[silk]] scarf is placed on the chicken's head and a close relative of the absent bride/groom holds the chicken so the ceremony may proceed. However, this practice is rare today.
  
==History==
+
==Chickens in history==
The first pictures of chickens in Europe are found on [[Corinth, Greece|Corinthian]] [[pottery]] of the [[7th century BC]]. The poet [[Cratinus]] (mid-[[5th century BC]], according to the later Greek author [[Athenaeus]]) calls the chicken "the [[Iran|Persia]]n alarm". In [[Aristophanes]]'s comedy ''[[The Birds (play)|The Birds]]'' ([[414 BC]]) a chicken is called "the [[Medes|Median]] bird", which points to an introduction from the East. Pictures of chickens are found on Greek [[red-figure pottery|red figure]] and [[black-figure pottery]].
+
[[Image:Red junglefowl hm.jpg|thumb|left|The Red Junglefowl]]
 +
The first pictures of chickens in Europe are found on [[Corinth, Greece|Corinthian]] [[pottery]] of the [[7th century BCE]]. The poet [[Cratinus]] (mid-[[5th century BCE]], according to the later Greek author [[Athenaeus]]) calls the chicken "the [[Iran|Persia]]n alarm". In [[Aristophanes]]'s comedy ''[[The Birds (play)|The Birds]]'' ([[414 BCE]]) a chicken is called "the [[Medes|Median]] bird", which points to an introduction from the East. Pictures of chickens are found on Greek [[red-figure pottery|red figure]] and [[black-figure pottery]].
  
In ancient Greece, chickens were still rare and were a rather prestigious food for [[symposia]]. [[Delos]] seems to have been a centre of chicken breeding.
+
In ancient Greece, chickens were still rare and were a rather prestigious food for [[Symposium|symposia]]. [[Delos]] seems to have been a centre of chicken breeding.
  
An early domestication of chickens in [[Southeast Asia]] is probable, since the word for domestic chicken (''*manuk'') is part of the reconstructed [[Proto-Austronesian language]] (see [[Austronesian languages]]). Chickens, together with [[dog]]s and [[pig]]s, were the domestic animals of the [[Lapita]] culture, the first [[Neolithic]] culture of [[Oceania]].  
+
An early domestication of chickens in [[Southeast Asia]] is probable, since the word for domestic chicken (''*manuk'') is part of the reconstructed [[Proto-Austronesian language]] (see [[Austronesian languages]]). Chickens, together with dogs and [[pig]]s, were the domestic animals of the [[Lapita]] culture, the first [[Neolithic]] culture of [[Oceania]].  
  
Chickens were spread by [[Polynesia]]n seafarers and reached [[Easter Island]] in the [[12th century]] AD, where they were the only domestic animal, with the possible exception of the [[Polynesian Rat]] (''Rattus exulans''). They were housed in extremely solid chicken coops built from stone. Traveling as cargo on trading boats, they reached the Asian continent via the islands of Indonesia and from there spread west to Europe and western Asia.  
+
Chickens were spread by [[Polynesia]]n seafarers and reached [[Easter Island]] in the [[12th century]] CE, where they were the only domestic animal, with the possible exception of the [[Polynesian Rat]] (''Rattus exulans''). They were housed in extremely solid chicken coops built from stone. Traveling as cargo on trading boats, they reached the Asian continent via the islands of Indonesia and from there spread west to Europe and western Asia.  
  
===Chickens in Ancient Rome===
+
The [[ancient Rome|Roman]]s used chickens for oracles, both when flying ("ex avibus") and when feeding ("auspicium ex tripudiis"). The hen ("gallina") gave a favourable omen ("auspicium ratum"), when appearing from the left (Cic.,de Div. ii.26), like the crow and the owl.
The [[ancient Rome|Roman]]s used chickens for oracles, both when flying ("ex avibus") and when feeding ("auspicium ex tripudiis"). The hen ("gallina") gave a favourable omen ("auspicium ratum"), when appearing from the left (Cic.,de Div. ii.26), like the crow and the owl.  
 
  
 
For the oracle "ex tripudiis" according to [[Cicero]] (Cic. de Div. ii.34), any bird could be used, but normally only chickens ("pulli") were consulted. The chickens were cared for by the pullarius, who opened their cage and fed them pulses or a special kind of soft cake when an augury was needed. If the chickens stayed in their cage, made noises ("occinerent"), beat their wings or flew away, the omen was bad; if they ate greedily, the omen was good.
 
For the oracle "ex tripudiis" according to [[Cicero]] (Cic. de Div. ii.34), any bird could be used, but normally only chickens ("pulli") were consulted. The chickens were cared for by the pullarius, who opened their cage and fed them pulses or a special kind of soft cake when an augury was needed. If the chickens stayed in their cage, made noises ("occinerent"), beat their wings or flew away, the omen was bad; if they ate greedily, the omen was good.
  
In [[249 BC]], the Roman general [[Publius Claudius Pulcher]] had his chickens thrown overboard when they refused to feed before the [[battle of Drepana]], saying "If they won't eat, perhaps they will drink." He promptly lost the battle against the [[Carthaginian]]s and 93 Roman ships were sunk. Back in Rome, he was tried for impiety and heavily fined.
+
In [[249 BCE]], the Roman general [[Publius Claudius Pulcher]] had his chickens thrown overboard when they refused to feed before the [[battle of Drepana]], saying "If they won't eat, perhaps they will drink." He promptly lost the battle against the [[Carthaginian]]s and 93 Roman ships were sunk. Back in Rome, he was tried for impiety and heavily fined.
  
In [[161 BC]] a law was passed in Rome that forbade the consumption of fattened chickens. It was renewed a number of times, but does not seem to have been successful. Fattening chickens with bread soaked in milk was thought to give especially delicious results. The Roman gourmet [[Apicius]] offers 17 recipes for chicken, mainly boiled chicken with a sauce. All parts of the animal are used: the [[recipe]]s include the [[stomach]], [[liver]], [[testicle]]s and even the [[pygostyle]] (the fatty "tail" of the chicken where the tail feathers attach).
+
In [[161 BCE]] a law was passed in Rome that forbade the consumption of fattened chickens. It was renewed a number of times, but does not seem to have been successful. Fattening chickens with bread soaked in milk was thought to give especially delicious results. The Roman gourmet [[Apicius]] offers 17 recipes for chicken, mainly boiled chicken with a sauce. All parts of the animal are used: the [[recipe]]s include the [[stomach]], liver, [[testicle]]s and even the [[pygostyle]] (the fatty "tail" of the chicken where the tail feathers attach).
  
The Roman author [[Columella]] gives advice on chicken breeding in his eighth book of his treatise on [[agriculture]]. He identifies Tanagrian, Rhodic, Chalkidic and Median (commonly misidentified as Melian) breeds, which have an impressive appearance, a quarrelsome nature and were used for cockfighting by the Greeks. For farming, native (Roman) chickens are to be preferred, or a cross between native hens and Greek cocks. Dwarf chickens are nice to watch because of their size but have no other advantages.
+
The Roman author [[Columella]] gives advice on chicken breeding in his eighth book of his treatise on [[agriculture]]. He identifies Tanagrian, Rhodic, Chalkidic and Median (commonly misidentified as Melian) breeds, which have an impressive appearance, a quarrelsome nature and were used for [[cockfighting]] by the Greeks. For farming, native (Roman) chickens are to be preferred, or a cross between native hens and Greek cocks. Dwarf chickens are nice to watch because of their size but have no other advantages.
  
 
Per Columella, the ideal flock consists of 200 birds, which can be supervised by one person if someone is watching for stray animals. White chickens should be avoided as they are not very fertile and are easily caught by eagles or goshawks. One cock should be kept for five hens. In the case of Rhodian and Median cocks that are very heavy and therefore not much inclined to sex, only three hens are kept per cock. The hens of heavy fowls are not much inclined to brood; therefore their eggs are best hatched by normal hens. A hen can hatch no more than 15-23 eggs, depending on the time of year, and supervise no more than 30 hatchlings. Eggs that are long and pointed give more male, rounded eggs mainly female hatchlings.
 
Per Columella, the ideal flock consists of 200 birds, which can be supervised by one person if someone is watching for stray animals. White chickens should be avoided as they are not very fertile and are easily caught by eagles or goshawks. One cock should be kept for five hens. In the case of Rhodian and Median cocks that are very heavy and therefore not much inclined to sex, only three hens are kept per cock. The hens of heavy fowls are not much inclined to brood; therefore their eggs are best hatched by normal hens. A hen can hatch no more than 15-23 eggs, depending on the time of year, and supervise no more than 30 hatchlings. Eggs that are long and pointed give more male, rounded eggs mainly female hatchlings.
Line 179: Line 351:
 
Per Columella, Chicken coops should face southeast and lie adjacent to the kitchen, as smoke is beneficial for the animals. Coops should consist of three rooms and possess a hearth. Dry dust or ash should be provided for dust-baths.
 
Per Columella, Chicken coops should face southeast and lie adjacent to the kitchen, as smoke is beneficial for the animals. Coops should consist of three rooms and possess a hearth. Dry dust or ash should be provided for dust-baths.
  
According to Columella, chicken should be fed on barley groats, small chick-peas, millet and wheat bran, if they are cheap. Wheat itself should be avoided, it is harmful to the birds. Boiled ryegrass (''Lollium'' sp.) and the leaves and seeds of alfalfa (''Medicago sativa'' L.) can be used as well. Grape marc can be used, but only when the hens stop laying eggs, that is, about the middle of November; otherwise eggs are small and few. When feeding grape marc, it should be supplemented with some bran. Hens start to lay eggs after the winter solstice, in warm places around the first of January, in colder areas in the middle of February. Parboiled barley increases their fertility; this should be mixed with alfalfa leaves and seeds, or vetches or millet if alfalfa is not at hand. Free-ranging chickens should receive two cups of barley daily.
+
According to Columella, chicken should be fed on barley groats, small chick-peas, millet and wheat bran, if they are cheap. Wheat itself should be avoided as it is harmful to the birds. Boiled ryegrass (''Lollium'' sp.) and the leaves and seeds of alfalfa (''Medicago sativa'' L.) can be used as well. Grape marc can be used, but only when the hens stop laying eggs, that is, about the middle of November; otherwise eggs are small and few. When feeding grape marc, it should be supplemented with some bran. Hens start to lay eggs after the winter solstice, in warm places around the first of January, in colder areas in the middle of February. Parboiled barley increases their fertility; this should be mixed with alfalfa leaves and seeds, or vetches or millet if alfalfa is not at hand. Free-ranging chickens should receive two cups of barley daily.
 +
 
 +
Columella advises farmers to slaughter hens that are older than three years, because they no longer produce sufficient eggs.
  
[[Columella]] advises farmers to slaughter hens that are older than three years, because they no longer produce sufficient eggs.
 
 
Capons were produced by burning out their spurs with a hot iron. The wound was treated with potter's chalk.
 
Capons were produced by burning out their spurs with a hot iron. The wound was treated with potter's chalk.
  
For the use of [[poultry]] and eggs in the kitchens of ancient Rome see [[Roman eating and drinking]].
+
For the use of poultry and eggs in the kitchens of ancient Rome see [[Roman eating and drinking]].
  
==Famous chickens==
+
===Chickens in South America===
===Real chickens===
+
An unusual variety of chicken that has its origins in [[South America]] is the [[araucana]]. Araucanas, some of which are tailless and some of which have tufts of feathers around their ears, lay blue-green eggs. It has long been suggested that they predate the arrival of European chickens brought by the [[Spanish colonization of the Americas|Spanish]] and are evidence of [[pre-Columbian]] trans-Pacific contacts between Asian or Pacific Oceanic peoples, particularly the Polynesians, and South America. In 2007, an international team of researchers reported the results of analysis of chicken bones found on the Arauco Peninsula in south central Chile. Radiocarbon dating indicated that the chickens were pre-Columbian, and DNA analysis showed that they were related to prehistoric populations of chickens in Polynesia.<ref>[http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070604/full/447620b.html DNA reveals how the chicken crossed the sea] Brendan Borrell, Nature, 5 June 2007. Retrieved [[2007-10-01]].</ref> These results appear to confirm that the chickens came from Polynesia and that there were transpacific contacts between Polynesia and South America before Columbus's arrival in the Americas.<ref>A. A. Storey et al, "Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile,"''Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America'', www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0703993104; John Noble Wilford, "First Chickens in Americas were Brought from Polynesia, ''New York Times'', June 5, 2007</ref>
*[[Mike the Headless Chicken]]
 
*[http://www.hencam.co.uk] Milly, Tilly and Penny
 
 
 
===Fictional chickens===
 
*Alecto and Galina, in [[Clemens Brentano]]'s "The Tale of Gockel, Hinkel, and Gackeleia."
 
*[[Billina]] the talking hen from [[L. Frank Baum]]'s ''[[Ozma of Oz]]''
 
*[[Chanticleer]], the rooster from [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]'s ''[[The Canterbury Tales]]'' ("The Nun's Priest's Tale")
 
*[[Chanticleer]], the Elvis Presley-like rooster in the [[Don Bluth]] film, ''[[Rock-a-Doodle]]''; presumably named for the Chaucer rooster.
 
*Chicken, from the ''[[Cow and Chicken]]'' cartoon series
 
*[[Chicken Boo]], from ''[[Animaniacs]]''
 
*[[Chicken Little]], the chicken that thought the sky was falling when an acorn landed on its head.
 
*[[Fission Chicken]], the Chicken of Wrath, grouchy superhero.
 
*[[Foghorn Leghorn]], the rooster and ''[[Looney Tunes]]'' character
 
*Le coq d'or (The Golden Cockerel) opera by [[Rimsky-Korsakov]], with a magical cock that is supposed to crow to warn the king of advancing enemies.
 
*Le galline penseuse of [[Luigi Malerba]] (Einaudi, 1980).
 
*Ginger, the protagonist of the movie ''[[Chicken Run]]''
 
*[[The Goose that Laid the Golden Egg]] was originally a chicken in some older versions.
 
*[[The Little Red Hen]], who asked everyone in the barnyard to help bake bread.
 
*[[Little Jerry Seinfeld]], a fighting cock appearing in "[[The Little Jerry]]" (episode 145) of [[Seinfeld]].
 
*[http://www.pinenet.com/~rooster/rooster2.html The Rooster Prince] is a [[parable]] written by [[Rabbi Nachman of Breslov]], in which a prince goes insane and believes himself to be a rooster (in some English translations of the tale, the species of bird is a [[turkey (bird)|turkey]]).
 
*[[The San Diego Chicken]]
 
*[[The Subservient Chicken]], part of a [[viral marketing]] promotion.
 
*[[Lord Chicken the Great]]; see [[Leongatha]].
 
*[[Gyro Gearloose]], a [[The Walt Disney Company|Disney]] character and inventor.
 
*[[Ultra Mega Chicken]] is a legendary chicken raised from the dead by [[Billy Witch Doctor]] in [[Aqua Teen Hunger Force]]
 
* Roy, Booker and Sheldon from ''[[U.S. Acres]]''
 
* [[King Chicken]], from ''[[Duckman]]''
 
* Little John, Bubble, Bubble Junior,Pop, Araucana 1, Araucana II, Buffy Araucana, Mary and Sheepy are the chickens of a popular ABC television show set in Turramurra, Sydney, Australia called "the chickens of Warragal Road".  The series ran from 1983 to 1985.
 
* The 'Yellow Chicken' that violently and restlessly fights Peter in [[Family Guy]] has become one of the most beloved character on the cult show.
 
* [[Robot Chicken]], a television series that appears on Adult Swim and features a mad scientist bringing a roadkill chicken to life in cyborg form in the opening theme. The show itself has nothing to do with chickens.
 
* Charles the Rooster in [[Walter R. Brooks]]' "[[Freddy the Pig]]" Series.
 
* Henerietta the Hen in [[Walter R. Brooks]]' "[[Freddy the Pig]]" Series.
 
 
 
===Mythical creatures with chicken-like anatomy===
 
#The hut of the Russian [[witch]] [[Baba Yaga]] moves on chicken feet
 
#The demon [[Abraxas]], often depicted on "[[Gnosis|Gnostic]] gems" has a cock's head, the upper body of a man, while his lower part is formed by a snake. He often holds a whip.
 
#The [[Basilisk]],a giant snake who kills with a single glance and poisons wells, was hatched by a toad from a hen's egg.
 
#The [[cockatrice]].
 
 
 
==Chicken as symbol==
 
*[[France national rugby union team]]
 
*The [[Rhodesia]] (now [[Zimbabwe]]) independent party [[ZANU]] party used a chicken as a symbol, since a majority of Rhodesian citizens were [[analphabetical]].
 
* The mascot of the English Premiership team [[Tottenham Hotspur F.C.|Tottenham Hotspur]] is a cockerel.
 
* The standard of [[Sir Robin]] from [[Monty Python and the Holy Grail]] is a chicken.
 
* The town of [[Denizli]] in [[Republic of Turkey]] is symbolized by a cock.
 
* [[Sydney Roosters]] Australian rugby league team
 
* The [[Rhode Island Red]] is the state bird of Rhode Island.
 
* [[Pathé]] corporate logo
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 +
[[Image:Chooks Sleeping in a Tree.jpg|thumb|right|Unless tamed, chickens will naturally roost in trees.]]
 +
*[[Alektorphobic]] - someone scared of chickens
 +
*[[List of chicken breeds]]
 +
*[[Chicken coop]]
 +
*[[Symbolic chickens]]
 
*[[Chicken hypnotism]]
 
*[[Chicken hypnotism]]
*[[List of chicken breeds]]
 
 
*[[The chicken or the egg]]
 
*[[The chicken or the egg]]
 +
*[[Why did the chicken cross the road?]]
 +
*[[Rubber chicken]]
 +
*[[Gamebird hybrids]] - hybrids between chickens, peafowl, guineafowl and pheasants
 +
*[[Chook raffle]] - A type of raffle where the prize is a chicken.
 +
*[[Exploding chicken]]
 +
 +
==References==
 +
<!--<nowiki>
 +
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the<ref> and </ref> tags, and the template below.
 +
</nowiki>—>
 +
<div class="references-small">
 +
'''Cited'''
 +
<references />
 +
'''General'''
 +
*{{cite book
 +
  | last = Smith
 +
  | first = Page
 +
  | coauthors = Charles Daniel
 +
  | authorlink = Page Smith
 +
  | title = ''The Chicken Book''
 +
  | publisher = University of Georgia Press
 +
  | date = April 2000
 +
  | isbn = 082032213X}}
 +
</div>
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{Commonscat|Chicken}}
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{{commons|Gallus gallus|Chicken}}
{{Cookbook}}
+
<!-- ==============================({{NoMoreLinks}})============================== —>
 
+
<!-- DO NOT ADD MORE LINKS TO THIS ARTICLE UNLESS THEY CONFORM TO [[WP:EL]]. WIKIPEDIA IS NOT A COLLECTION OF LINKS -->
* "[http://poultryone.com Poultry One's Guide to Raising Poultry]" - Articles on raising chickens
+
<!-- ============================================================================= -->
*"[http://www.ruleworks.co.uk/poultry The Poultry Guide]" - A to Z and FAQ Knowledgebase / Chicken Reference Guide
+
*{{dmoz|Kids_and_Teens/School_Time/Science/Living_Things/Animals/Birds/Chickens/| About chickens, for kids and teens}}
* [http://poultryone.com/chickens.php Articles on Raising Chickens] - Chicken raising guide
+
*{{dmoz|Science/Biology/Flora_and_Fauna/Animalia/Chordata/Aves/Galliformes/Phasianidae/Gallus/| ''Gallus'' spp. biology}}
*"[http://www.omlet.co.uk/guide/guide.php?view=Chickens&cat=About%20Chickens Omlet Chicken Guide] - a comprehensive guide to keeping chickens by a UK company
+
*{{dmoz|Science/Agriculture/Animals/Birds/Poultry/| Poultry (farming)}}
* [http://www.omlet.co.uk/breeds/breeds.php?breed_type=Chickens Omlet Breed Guide] - good pictures of chickens
+
*{{dmoz|Home/Rural_Living/Hobby_Farms/Poultry/ | Poultry (hobby farming)}}
* [http://www.certifiedhumane.com Humane Farm Animal Care] - publish standards for humanely keeping chickens
 
* [http://www.chickflickthefilm.com/ Chick Flick: The Miracle Mike Story] – a full length documentary film
 
* [http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/science/05/26/chicken.egg/ Chicken and egg debate unscrambled] - CNN article answering which came first
 
  
  
{{credit|61689828}}
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{{credit|Chicken|163868323}}

Revision as of 20:34, 15 October 2007


Chicken
A Rooster (male chicken)
A Rooster (male chicken)
Conservation status
Conservation status: Domesticated
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Galliformes
Family: Phasianidae
Genus: Gallus
Species: G. gallus

The chicken (Gallus gallus) is a type of domesticated fowl, believed to be descended from the wild Indian and south-east Asian Red Junglefowl.

The chicken is one of the most common and wide-spread domestic animals. With a population of more than 24 billion in 2003,[1] there are more chickens in the world than any other bird. Humans keep chickens primarily as a source of food, from both their meat and their eggs.

General biology and habitat

A day-old chick

Chickens generally live five to eleven years depending on the breed [2]. Male chickens are known as roosters (in the U.S., Canada and Australia); in the UK they are known as cocks when over one year of age, or cockerels when under one year of age[3]. Castrated roosters are called capons. Female chickens over a year old are known as hens. Young females under a year old are known as pullets[4]. Roosters can usually be differentiated from hens by their striking plumage, marked by long flowing tails and bright pointed feathers on their necks.

However, in some breeds, such as the Sebright, the cock only has slightly pointed neck feathers, and the identification must be made by looking at the comb. Chickens have a fleshy crest on their heads called a comb or cockscomb, and a fleshy piece of hanging skin under their beak called a wattle. These organs help to cool the bird by redirecting blood flow to the skin. Both the male and female have distinctive wattles and combs. In males, the combs are often more prominent, though this is not the case in all varieties.

Domestic chickens are typically fed commercially prepared feed that includes a protein source as well as grains. Chickens often scratch at the soil to search for insects and seeds. Incidents of cannibalism can occur when a curious bird pecks at a preexisting wound or during fighting (even among female birds). This is exacerbated in close quarters. In commercial egg and meat production this is controlled by trimming the beak (removal of two thirds of the top half and occasionally one third of the lower half of the beak).

Domestic chickens are not capable of long distance flight, although they are generally capable of flying for short distances such as over fences. Chickens will sometimes fly to explore their surroundings, but usually do so only to flee perceived danger. Because of the risk of escape, chickens raised in open-air pens generally have one of their wings clipped by the breeder — the tips of the longest feathers on one of the wings are cut, resulting in unbalanced flight which the bird cannot sustain for more than a few meters.

Chickens are gregarious birds and live together as a flock. They have a communal approach to the incubation of eggs and raising of young. Individual chickens in a flock will dominate others, establishing a "pecking order," with dominant individuals having priority for access to food and nesting locations. Removing hens or roosters from a flock causes a temporary disruption to this social order until a new pecking order is established.

Chickens will try to lay in nests that already contain eggs, and have been known to move eggs from neighbouring nests into their own. Some farmers use fake eggs made from plastic or stone to encourage hens to lay in a particular location. The result of this behavior is that a flock will use only a few preferred locations, rather than having a different nest for every bird.

Hens can also be extremely stubborn about always laying in the same location. It is not unknown for two (or more) hens to try to share the same nest at the same time. If the nest is small, or one of the hens is particularly determined, this may result in chickens trying to lay on top of each other.

Rooster crowing during daylight hours

Contrary to popular belief, roosters do not crow only at dawn, but may crow at any time of the day or night. Their crowing - a loud and sometimes shrill call - is a territorial signal to other roosters. However, crowing may also result from sudden disturbances within their surroundings.

In 2006, scientists researching the ancestry of birds "turned on" a chicken recessive gene, talpid2, and found that the embryo jaws initiated formation of teeth, like those found in ancient bird fossils. John Fallon the overseer of the project stated that chickens have "...retained the ability to make teeth, under certain conditions..."[5]

Courting

When a rooster finds food he may call the other chickens to eat it first. He does this by clucking in a high pitch as well as picking up and dropping the food. This behavior can also be observed in mother hens, calling their chicks. In some cases the rooster will drag the wing opposite the hen on the ground, while circling her. This is part of chicken courting ritual. When a hen is used to coming to his "call" the rooster may mount the hen and proceed with the fertilization.

Going broody

Chicken eggs vary in color depending on the hen, typically ranging from bright white to shades of brown and even blue, green, and recently reported purple (found in South Asia) (Araucana varieties).

Sometimes a hen will stop laying and instead will focus on the incubation of eggs, a state that is commonly known as going broody. A broody chicken will sit fast on the nest, and protest or peck in defense if disturbed or removed, and will rarely leave the nest to eat, drink, or dust bathe. While brooding, the hen maintains constant temperature and humidity, as well as turning the eggs regularly.

At the end of the incubation period, which is an average of 21 days, the eggs (if fertilized) will hatch, and the broody hen will take care of her young. Since individual eggs do not all hatch at exactly the same time (the chicken can only lay one egg approximately every 25 hours), the hen will usually stay on the nest for about two days after the first egg hatches. During this time, the newly-hatched chicks live off the egg yolk they absorb just before hatching. The hen can sense the chicks peeping inside the eggs, and will gently cluck to stimulate them to break out of their shells. If the eggs are not fertilized by a rooster and do not hatch, the hen will eventually lose interest and leave the nest.

Modern egg-laying breeds rarely go broody, and those that do often stop part-way through the incubation cycle. Some breeds, such as the Cochin, Cornish and Silkie, regularly go broody and make excellent maternal figures. Chickens used in this capacity are known as utility chickens.

Artificial incubation

Chicken egg incubation can successfully occur artificially as well. Nearly all chicken eggs will hatch after 21 days of good conditions - 99.5 °F (37.5°C) and around 55% relative humidity (increase to 70% in the last three days of incubation to help soften egg shell). Many commercial incubators are industrial-sized with shelves holding tens of thousands of eggs at a time, with rotation of the eggs a fully automated process.

Home incubators are usually large boxes (lead incubators are popular) and hold a few to 75 eggs. Eggs must be turned three to eight times each week, rotating at least 180 degrees. If eggs aren't turned, the embryo inside will stick to the shell and likely will be hatched with physical defects. This process is natural; hens will stand up three to five times a day and shift the eggs around with their beak.

File:Eggess.JPG
A free range egg (left) next to a battery egg (right).

Chickens as food

The meat of the chicken, also called "chicken," is a type of poultry. Because of its relatively low cost among meats, chicken is one of the most used meats in the world. Nearly all parts of the bird can be used for food, and the meat is cooked in many different ways around the world. Popular chicken dishes include fried chicken, chicken soup, Buffalo wings, tandoori chicken, butter chicken, and chicken rice. Chicken is also a staple of fast food restaurants such as KFC, McDonald's, and Burger King. Chicken has a fairly neutral flavor and texture, and is used as a reference point for describing other foods; many are said to 'taste like chicken' if they are indistinctive.

Chickens as pets

Chickens can make good companion animals and can be tamed by hand feeding, but can sometimes become aggressive. Some have advised against keeping certain breeds around young children[citation needed], as the chickens can become territorial and violent. In Asia, chickens with striking plumage have long been kept for ornamental purposes, including feather-footed varieties such as the Cochin from Vietnam, the Silkie from China, and the extremely long-tailed Phoenix from Japan. Asian ornamental varieties were imported into the United States and Great Britain in the late 1800s. Distinctive American varieties of chickens have been developed from these Asian breeds. Poultry fanciers began keeping these ornamental birds for exhibition, a practice that continues today.

While some cities in the United States allow chickens as pets, the practice is not approved in all localities. The so called urban hen movement harks back to the days when chicken keeping was much more common, and involves the keeping of small groups of hens in areas where they may not be expected, such as closely populated cities and suburban areas. Individuals in rural communities commonly keep chickens for both ornamental and practical value. Some communities ban only roosters, allowing the quieter hens. Zoos sometimes use chickens instead of insecticides to control insect populations.

Chickens are generally low maintenance. The major challenge is protecting the birds from predators such as dogs, raccoons and foxes. Chickens are usually kept in a roost at night and a pen in the day (unless they are free-range). The floor is covered with bedding such as straw or wood shavings. A bird left out at night is likely to be killed by a predator.

Eggs from household chickens can be quite different from the commercial eggs. Fresh yolks are "perky" and float above the white. The yolk color is frequently a deeper color than the pale yellow of commercially raised eggs and can at times be almost orange.

Chickens in agriculture

Free range chickens

In the United States, chickens were raised primarily on family farms until roughly 1960. Originally, the primary value in poultry keeping was eggs, and meat was considered a byproduct of egg production. Its supply was less than the demand, and poultry was expensive. Except in hot weather, eggs can be shipped and stored without refrigeration for some time before going bad; this was important in the days before widespread refrigeration.

Farm flocks tended to be small because the hens largely fed themselves through foraging, with some supplementation of grain, scraps, and waste products from other farm ventures. Such feedstuffs were in limited supply, especially in the winter, and this tended to regulate the size of the farm flocks. Soon after poultry keeping gained the attention of agricultural researchers (around 1896), improvements in nutrition and management made poultry keeping more profitable and businesslike.

Prior to about 1910, chicken was served primarily on special occasions or Sunday dinner. Poultry was shipped live or killed, plucked, and packed on ice (but not eviscerated). The "whole, ready-to-cook broiler" wasn't popular until the Fifties, when end-to-end refrigeration and sanitary practices gave consumers more confidence. Before this, poultry were often cleaned by the neighborhood butcher, though cleaning poultry at home was a commonplace kitchen skill.

Two kinds of poultry were generally used: broilers or "spring chickens;" young male chickens, a byproduct of the egg industry, which were sold when still young and tender (generally under 3 pounds live weight), and "stewing hens," also a byproduct of the egg industry, which were old hens past their prime for laying. [6] This is no longer practiced; modern meat chickens are a different breed. Egg-type chicken carcasses no longer appear in stores.

The major milestone in 20th century poultry production was the discovery of vitamin D, which made it possible to keep chickens in confinement year-round. Before this, chickens did not thrive during the winter (due to lack of sunlight), and egg production, incubation, and meat production in the off-season were all very difficult, making poultry a seasonal and expensive proposition. Year-round production lowered costs, especially for broilers.

At the same time, egg production was increased by scientific breeding. After a few false starts (such as the Maine Experiment Station's failure at improving egg production[7], success was shown by Professor Dryden at the Oregon Experiment Station[8].

Improvements in production and quality were accompanied by lower labor requirements. In the Thirties through the early Fifties, 1,500 hens was considered to be a full-time job for a farm family. In the late Fifties, egg prices had fallen so dramatically that farmers typically tripled the number of hens they kept, putting three hens into what had been a single-bird cage or converting their floor-confinement houses from a single deck of roosts to triple-decker roosts. Not long after this, prices fell still further and large numbers of egg farmers left the business. This marked the beginning of the transition from family farms to larger, vertically integrated operations.

Robert Plamondon[9] reports that the last family chicken farm in his part of Oregon, Rex Farms, had 30,000 layers and survived into the Nineties. But the standard laying house of the surviving operations is around 125,000 hens.

This fall in profitability was accompanied by a general fall in prices to the consumer, allowing poultry and eggs to lose their status as luxury foods.

The vertical integration of the egg and poultry industries was a late development, occurring after all the major technological changes had been in place for years (including the development of modern broiler rearing techniques, the adoption of the Cornish Cross broiler, the use of laying cages, etc.).

By the late Fifties, poultry production had changed dramatically. Large farms and packing plants could grow birds by the tens of thousands. Chickens could be sent to slaughterhouses for butchering and processing into prepackaged commercial products to be frozen or shipped fresh to markets or wholesalers. Meat-type chickens currently grow to market weight in six to seven weeks whereas only fifty years ago it took three times as long.[10] This is due to genetic selection and nutritional modifications (and not the use of growth hormones, which are illegal for use in poultry in the US and many other countries). Once a meat consumed only occasionally, the common availability and lower cost has made chicken a common meat product within developed nations. Growing concerns over the cholesterol content of red meat in the 1980s and 1990s further resulted in increased consumption of chicken.

Today, eggs are produced on large egg ranches on which environmental parameters are controlled. Chickens are exposed to artificial light cycles to stimulate egg production year-round. In addition, it is a common practice to induce molting through manipulation of light and the amount of food they receive in order to further increase egg size and production.

On average, a chicken lays one egg a day for a number of days (a "clutch"), then does not lay for one or more days, then lays another clutch. Originally, the hen presumably laid one clutch, became broody, and incubated the eggs. Selective breeding over the centuries has produced hens that lay more eggs than they can hatch. Some of this progress was ancient, but most occurred after 1900. In 1900, average egg production was 83 eggs per hen per year. In 2000, it was well over 300.

In the United States, laying hens are butchered after their second egg laying season. In Europe, they are generally butchered after a single season. The laying period begins when the hen is about 18-20 weeks old (depending on breed and season). Males of the egg-type breeds have little commercial value at any age, and all those not used for breeding (roughly fifty percent of all egg-type chickens) are killed soon after hatching. The old hens also have little commercial value. Thus, the main sources of poultry meat 100 years ago (spring chickens and stewing hens) have both been entirely supplanted by meat-type broiler chickens.

File:2004chicken.PNG
Chicken headcount in 2004

Traditionally, chicken production was distributed across the entire agricultural sector. In the Twentieth Century, it gradually moved closer to major cities to take advantage of lower shipping costs. This had the undesirable side effect of turning the chicken manure from a valuable fertilizer that could be used profitably on local farms to an unwanted byproduct. This trend may be reversing itself due to higher disposal costs on the one hand and higher fertilizer prices on the other, making farm regions attractive once more.

From the farmer's point of view, eggs used to be practically the same as currency, with general stores buying eggs for a stated price per dozen. Egg production peaks in the early spring, when farm expenses are high and income is low. On many farms, the flock was the most important source of income, though this was often not appreciated by the farmers, since the money arrived in many small payments. Eggs were a farm operation where even small children could make a valuable contribution.

Distribution

FAO reports that China was the top chicken market in 2004 followed by the USA.

Issues with mass production

Humane treatment

Battery chickens

Animal welfare groups have frequently targeted the poultry industry for engaging in practices which they believe to be inhumane. Many animal welfare advocates object to killing chickens for food, the "factory farm conditions" under which they are raised, methods of transport, and slaughter. PETA and other groups have repeatedly conducted undercover investigations at chicken farms and slaughterhouses which they allege confirm their claims of cruelty. [11]

Laying hens are routinely debeaked to prevent fighting. Because beaks are sensitive, trimming them without anaesthesia is considered inhumane by some. It is also argued that the procedure causes life-long discomfort. Conditions in intensive chicken farms may be unsanitary, allowing the proliferation of diseases such as salmonella and E coli. Chickens may be raised in total darkness. Rough handling and crowded transport during various weather conditions and the failure of existing stunning systems to render the birds unconscious before slaughter have also been cited as welfare concerns.

Another animal welfare concern is the use of selective breeding to create heavy, large-breasted birds, which can lead to crippling leg disorders and heart failure for some of the birds. Concerns have been raised that companies growing single varieties of birds for eggs or meat are increasing their susceptibility to disease.

Some groups who advocate for more humane treatment of chickens, claim that they are intelligent. Chickens can be trained to bowl,[citation needed] play a toy piano[citation needed] or play tic-tac-toe.[citation needed] Dr. Chris Evans of Macquarie University claims that their range of 20 calls, problem solving skills, use of representational signalling, and the ability to recognize each other by facial features demonstrate the intelligence of chickens.[1].

In 2004, 8.9 billion chickens were slaughtered in the United States. [12] There is no federal law that regulates the humane treatment of chickens.

Human concerns

Antibiotics

Antibiotics have been used on poultry in large quantities since the Forties, when it was found that the byproducts of antibiotic production, fed because the antibiotic-producing mold had a high level of vitamin B12 after the antibiotics were removed, produced higher growth than could be accounted for by the vitamin B12 alone. Eventually it was discovered that the trace amounts of antibiotics remaining in the byproducts accounted for this growth.[13]

The mechanism is apparently the adjustment of intestinal flora, favoring "good" bacteria while suppressing "bad" bacteria, and thus the goal of antibiotics as a growth promoter is the same as for probiotics. Because the antibiotics used are not absorbed by the gut, they do not put antibiotics into the meat or eggs.[14]

Antibiotics are used routinely in poultry for this reason, and also to prevent and treat disease. Many contend that this puts humans at risk as bacterial strains develop stronger and stronger resistances. [15] Critics point out that, after six decades of heavy agricultural use of antibiotics, opponents of antibiotics must still make arguments about theoretical risks, since actual examples are hard to come by. Those antibiotic-resistant strains of human diseases whose origin is known originated in hospitals rather than farms.

A proposed bill in the American congress would make the use of antibiotics in animal feed legal only for therapeutic (rather than preventative) use, but it has not been passed yet. [16] However, this may present the risk of slaughtered chickens harboring pathogenic bacteria and passing them on to humans that consume them.

In October 2000, the FDA discovered that two antibiotics were no longer effective in treating diseases found in factory-farmed chickens; one antibiotic was swiftly pulled from the market, but the other, Baytril was not. Bayer, the company which produced it, contested the claim and as a result, Baytril remained in use until July of 2005. [17]

Arsenic

Chicken feed can also include Roxarsone, an antimicrobial drug that also promotes growth. The drug has generated controversy because it contains the element arsenic, which can cause cancer, dementia, and neurological problems in humans. Yet the arsenic in Roxarsone is not of the type which has been linked to cancer. A Consumer Reports study in 2004 reported finding "no detectable arsenic in our samples of muscle" but found "A few of our chicken-liver samples has an amount that according to EPA standards could cause neurological problems in a child who ate 2 ounces of cooked liver per week or in an adult who ate 5.5 ounces per week." However, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the organization responsible for the regulation of foods in America, and all samples tested were "far less than the... amount allowed in a food product." [18]

Growth hormones

Chickens grow much more rapidly than they once did and some consumers have concluded that this rapid growth is due to the use of hormones in these animals. Some consumers believe that the increasingly earlier onset of puberty in humans is the result of the liberal use of such hormones. However, hormone use in poultry production is illegal in the United States. [19] Similarly, no chicken meat for sale in Australia is fed hormones. [20] Furthermore, several scientific studies have documented the fact that chickens grow rapidly because they are bred to do so. [21] [22] A small producer of natural and organic chickens confirmed this assumption:

If this were 1948, you might have something to worry about. Using hormones to boost egg production was a brief fad in the Forties, but was abandoned because it didn't work. Using hormones to produce soft-meated roasters was used to some extent in the Forties and Fifties, but the increased growth rates of broilers made the practice irrelevant—the broilers got as big as anyone wanted them to get when they were still young enough to be soft-meated without chemicals.

The only hormone that was ever used in any quantity on poultry (DES) was banned in 1959, after everyone but a few die-hard farmers had given them up as a silly idea. Hormones are now illegal in poultry and eggs. The people who advertise "No hormones" are either woefully ignorant or are indulging in cynical fear-mongering, maybe both.[2]

E.coli

A free roaming bantam chicken family of rooster, hen and six chicks as seen on the streets of downtown Key West, Florida

According to Consumer Reports, "1.1 million or more Americans [are] sickened each year by undercooked, tainted chicken." A USDA study discovered E.Coli in 99% of supermarket chicken, the result of chicken butchering not being a sterile process. Feces tend to leak from the carcass until the evisceration stage, and the evisceration stage itself gives an opportunity for the interior of the carcass to receive intestinal bacteria. (So does the skin of the carcass, but the skin presents a better barrier to bacteria and reaches higher temperatures during cooking). Before 1950, this was contained largely by not eviscerating the carcass at the time of butchering, deferring this until the time of retail sale or in the home. This gave the intestinal bacteria less opportunity to colonize the edible meat. The development of the "ready-to-cook broiler" in the Fifties added convenience while introducing risk, under the assumption that end-to-end refrigeration and thorough cooking would provide adequate protection. E. Coli can be killed by proper cooking times, but there is still some risk associated with it, and its near-ubiquity in commercially-farmed chicken is troubling to some. Irradiation has been proposed as a means of sterilizing chicken meat after butchering.

Avian influenza

There is also a risk that the crowded conditions in many chicken farms will allow avian influenza to spread quickly. A United Nations press release states: "Governments, local authorities and international agencies need to take a greatly increased role in combating the role of factory-farming, commerce in live poultry, and wildlife markets which provide ideal conditions for the virus to spread and mutate into a more dangerous form..." [23]

Efficiency

Farming of chickens on an industrial scale relies largely on high protein feeds derived from soybeans; in the European Union the soybean dominates the protein supply for animal feed[24], and the poultry industry is the largest consumer of such feed[25]. Giving the feed to chickens means the protein reaches humans with a much lower efficiency than through direct consumption of soybean products. Some nutrients, however, are present in chicken but not in the soybean.

Chicken diseases

File:Chikies 17apr06.jpg
Baby chicks in a box

Chickens are susceptible to several parasites, including lice, mites, ticks, fleas, and intestinal worms, as well as other diseases. (Despite the name, they are not affected by Chickenpox; that is a disease of humans, not chickens.)

Some of the common diseases that affect chickens are shown below:

Name Common Name Caused by
Aspergillosis fungi
Avian influenza bird flu virus
Histomoniasis Blackhead disease protozoal parasite
Botulism toxin
Cage Layer Fatigue mineral deficiencies, lack of exercise
Coccidiosis parasites
Colds virus
Crop Bound improper feeding
Egg bound oversized egg
Erysipelas bacteria
Fatty Liver Hemorrhagic Syndrome high-energy food
Fowl Cholera bacteria
Fowl pox virus
Fowl Typhoid bacteria
Gallid herpesvirus 1
or Infectious Laryngotracheitis
virus
Gapeworm Syngamus trachea worms
Infectious Bronchitis virus
Infectious Bursal Disease Gumboro virus
Infectious Coryza bacteria
Lymphoid Leucosis virus
Marek's disease virus
Moniliasis Yeast Infection
or Thrush
fungi
Mycoplasmas bacteria-like organisms
Newcastle disease virus
Necrotic Enteritis bacteria
Omphalitis Mushy chick disease umbilical cord stump
Prolapse
Psittacosis bacteria
Pullorum Salmonella bacteria
Scaly leg parasites
Squamous cell carcinoma cancer
Tibial dyschondroplasia speed growing
Toxoplasmosis protozoal parasite
Ulcerative Enteritis bacteria

Chickens in religion

In Indonesia the chicken has great significance during the Hindu cremation ceremony. A chicken is considered a channel for evil spirits which may be present during the ceremony. A chicken is tethered by the leg and kept present at the ceremony for its duration to ensure that any evil spirits present during the ceremony go into the chicken and not the family members present. The chicken is then taken home and returns to its normal life.

In ancient Greece, the chicken was not normally used for sacrifices, perhaps because it was still considered an exotic animal. Because of its valour, the cock is found as an attribute of Ares, Heracles, and Athena. The alleged last words of Socrates as he died from hemlock poisoning, as recounted by Plato, were "Crito, I owe a cock to Asclepius; will you remember to pay the debt?", signifying that death was a cure for the illness of life.

The Greeks believed that even lions were afraid of cocks. Several of Aesop's Fables reference this belief. In the cult of Mithras, the cock was a symbol of the divine light and a guardian against evil.[citation needed]

In the Bible, Jesus prophesied the betrayal by Peter: "Jesus answered, 'I tell you, Peter, before the rooster crows today, you will deny three times that you know me.'" (Luke 22:34) Thus it happened (Luke 22:61), and Peter cried bitterly. This made the cock a symbol for both vigilance and betrayal.

Earlier, Jesus compares himself to a mother hen when talking about Jerusalem: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing." (Matthew 23:37; also Luke 13:34).

In many Central European folk tales, the devil is believed to flee at the first crowing of a cock.

In traditional Jewish practice, a chicken is swung around the head and then slaughtered on the afternoon before Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, in a ritual called kapparos. The sacrifice of the chicken is to receive atonement, for the bird takes on all the person's sins in kapparos. The meat is then donated to the poor. A woman brings a hen for the ceremony, while a man brings a rooster. Although not actually a sacrifice in the biblical sense, the death of the chicken reminds the penitent sinner that his or her life is in God's hands.

The Talmud speaks of learning "courtesy toward one's mate" from the rooster. This might refer to the fact that when a rooster finds something good to eat, he calls his hens to eat first.

The chicken is one of the Zodiac symbols of the Chinese calendar. Also in Chinese religion, a cooked chicken as a religious offering is usually limited to ancestor veneration and worship of village deities. Vegetarian deities such as the Buddha are not one of the recipients of such offerings. Under some observations, an offering of chicken is presented with "serious" prayer (while roasted pork is offered during a joyous celebration). In Confucian Chinese Weddings, a chicken can be used as a substitute for one who is seriously ill or not available (e.g sudden death) to attend the ceremony. A red silk scarf is placed on the chicken's head and a close relative of the absent bride/groom holds the chicken so the ceremony may proceed. However, this practice is rare today.

Chickens in history

The Red Junglefowl

The first pictures of chickens in Europe are found on Corinthian pottery of the 7th century B.C.E. The poet Cratinus (mid-5th century B.C.E., according to the later Greek author Athenaeus) calls the chicken "the Persian alarm". In Aristophanes's comedy The Birds (414 B.C.E.) a chicken is called "the Median bird", which points to an introduction from the East. Pictures of chickens are found on Greek red figure and black-figure pottery.

In ancient Greece, chickens were still rare and were a rather prestigious food for symposia. Delos seems to have been a centre of chicken breeding.

An early domestication of chickens in Southeast Asia is probable, since the word for domestic chicken (*manuk) is part of the reconstructed Proto-Austronesian language (see Austronesian languages). Chickens, together with dogs and pigs, were the domestic animals of the Lapita culture, the first Neolithic culture of Oceania.

Chickens were spread by Polynesian seafarers and reached Easter Island in the 12th century CE, where they were the only domestic animal, with the possible exception of the Polynesian Rat (Rattus exulans). They were housed in extremely solid chicken coops built from stone. Traveling as cargo on trading boats, they reached the Asian continent via the islands of Indonesia and from there spread west to Europe and western Asia.

The Romans used chickens for oracles, both when flying ("ex avibus") and when feeding ("auspicium ex tripudiis"). The hen ("gallina") gave a favourable omen ("auspicium ratum"), when appearing from the left (Cic.,de Div. ii.26), like the crow and the owl.

For the oracle "ex tripudiis" according to Cicero (Cic. de Div. ii.34), any bird could be used, but normally only chickens ("pulli") were consulted. The chickens were cared for by the pullarius, who opened their cage and fed them pulses or a special kind of soft cake when an augury was needed. If the chickens stayed in their cage, made noises ("occinerent"), beat their wings or flew away, the omen was bad; if they ate greedily, the omen was good.

In 249 B.C.E., the Roman general Publius Claudius Pulcher had his chickens thrown overboard when they refused to feed before the battle of Drepana, saying "If they won't eat, perhaps they will drink." He promptly lost the battle against the Carthaginians and 93 Roman ships were sunk. Back in Rome, he was tried for impiety and heavily fined.

In 161 B.C.E. a law was passed in Rome that forbade the consumption of fattened chickens. It was renewed a number of times, but does not seem to have been successful. Fattening chickens with bread soaked in milk was thought to give especially delicious results. The Roman gourmet Apicius offers 17 recipes for chicken, mainly boiled chicken with a sauce. All parts of the animal are used: the recipes include the stomach, liver, testicles and even the pygostyle (the fatty "tail" of the chicken where the tail feathers attach).

The Roman author Columella gives advice on chicken breeding in his eighth book of his treatise on agriculture. He identifies Tanagrian, Rhodic, Chalkidic and Median (commonly misidentified as Melian) breeds, which have an impressive appearance, a quarrelsome nature and were used for cockfighting by the Greeks. For farming, native (Roman) chickens are to be preferred, or a cross between native hens and Greek cocks. Dwarf chickens are nice to watch because of their size but have no other advantages.

Per Columella, the ideal flock consists of 200 birds, which can be supervised by one person if someone is watching for stray animals. White chickens should be avoided as they are not very fertile and are easily caught by eagles or goshawks. One cock should be kept for five hens. In the case of Rhodian and Median cocks that are very heavy and therefore not much inclined to sex, only three hens are kept per cock. The hens of heavy fowls are not much inclined to brood; therefore their eggs are best hatched by normal hens. A hen can hatch no more than 15-23 eggs, depending on the time of year, and supervise no more than 30 hatchlings. Eggs that are long and pointed give more male, rounded eggs mainly female hatchlings.

Per Columella, Chicken coops should face southeast and lie adjacent to the kitchen, as smoke is beneficial for the animals. Coops should consist of three rooms and possess a hearth. Dry dust or ash should be provided for dust-baths.

According to Columella, chicken should be fed on barley groats, small chick-peas, millet and wheat bran, if they are cheap. Wheat itself should be avoided as it is harmful to the birds. Boiled ryegrass (Lollium sp.) and the leaves and seeds of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) can be used as well. Grape marc can be used, but only when the hens stop laying eggs, that is, about the middle of November; otherwise eggs are small and few. When feeding grape marc, it should be supplemented with some bran. Hens start to lay eggs after the winter solstice, in warm places around the first of January, in colder areas in the middle of February. Parboiled barley increases their fertility; this should be mixed with alfalfa leaves and seeds, or vetches or millet if alfalfa is not at hand. Free-ranging chickens should receive two cups of barley daily.

Columella advises farmers to slaughter hens that are older than three years, because they no longer produce sufficient eggs.

Capons were produced by burning out their spurs with a hot iron. The wound was treated with potter's chalk.

For the use of poultry and eggs in the kitchens of ancient Rome see Roman eating and drinking.

Chickens in South America

An unusual variety of chicken that has its origins in South America is the araucana. Araucanas, some of which are tailless and some of which have tufts of feathers around their ears, lay blue-green eggs. It has long been suggested that they predate the arrival of European chickens brought by the Spanish and are evidence of pre-Columbian trans-Pacific contacts between Asian or Pacific Oceanic peoples, particularly the Polynesians, and South America. In 2007, an international team of researchers reported the results of analysis of chicken bones found on the Arauco Peninsula in south central Chile. Radiocarbon dating indicated that the chickens were pre-Columbian, and DNA analysis showed that they were related to prehistoric populations of chickens in Polynesia.[26] These results appear to confirm that the chickens came from Polynesia and that there were transpacific contacts between Polynesia and South America before Columbus's arrival in the Americas.[27]

See also

File:Chooks Sleeping in a Tree.jpg
Unless tamed, chickens will naturally roost in trees.
  • Alektorphobic - someone scared of chickens
  • List of chicken breeds
  • Chicken coop
  • Symbolic chickens
  • Chicken hypnotism
  • The chicken or the egg
  • Why did the chicken cross the road?
  • Rubber chicken
  • Gamebird hybrids - hybrids between chickens, peafowl, guineafowl and pheasants
  • Chook raffle - A type of raffle where the prize is a chicken.
  • Exploding chicken

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Cited

  1. according to the Firefly Encyclopedia of Birds
  2. http://www.ruleworks.co.uk/cgi-bin/TUfaq.exe?Guide=Poultry&Category=Poultry%20-%20General#q9
  3. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cockerel
  4. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/pullet
  5. Scientists Find Chickens Retain Ancient Ability to Grow Teeth Ammu Kannampilly, ABC News, 2006-02-27. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  6. "The Dollar Hen", Milo Hastings, (1909)
  7. "The Dollar Hen", Milo Hastings, (1909)
  8. Dryden, James. Poultry Breeding and Management. Orange Judd Press, 1916.
  9. http://www.plamondon.com
  10. Havenstein, G.B., P.R. Ferket, and M.A. Qureshi, 2003a. Growth, livability, and feed conversion of 1957 versus 2001 broilers when fed representative 1957 and 2001 broiler diets. Poult. Sci. 82:1500-1508
  11. http://www.kentuckyfriedcruelty.com/u-cok.asp
  12. http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/reports/nassr/poultry/ppy-bb/
  13. Ewing, Poultry Nutrition, 5th ed., 1963, p. 1283.
  14. Ewing, Poultry Nutrition, 5th ed., 1963, p. 1284.
  15. http://dwb.unl.edu/Teacher/NSF/C10/C10Links/www.sierraclub.org/cafos/toolkit/antibiotic.asp
  16. http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/food/animal-feed-and-the-food-supply-105/chicken-arsenic-and-antibiotics/index.htm
  17. http://www.mindfully.org/Farm/2005/Baytril-Antibiotic-Banned29jul05.htm
  18. http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/food/animal-feed-and-the-food-supply-105/chicken-arsenic-and-antibiotics/index.htm
  19. http://www.fda.gov/cvm/hormones.htm
  20. http://www.abc.net.au/landline/stories/s543233.htm
  21. http://ps.fass.org/cgi/content/abstract/82/10/1509
  22. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=7877935&dopt=Abstract
  23. http://www.farmsanctuary.org/newsletter/Avain_flu.htm
  24. http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5019e/y5019e03.htm#bm03
  25. http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5019e/y5019e03.htm#bm03
  26. DNA reveals how the chicken crossed the sea Brendan Borrell, Nature, 5 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  27. A. A. Storey et al, "Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile,"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0703993104; John Noble Wilford, "First Chickens in Americas were Brought from Polynesia, New York Times, June 5, 2007

General

  • Smith, Page and Charles Daniel (April 2000). The Chicken Book. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 082032213X. 

External links

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