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  2. Chicken manure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_manure

    Chicken manure is the feces of chickens used as an organic fertilizer, especially for soil low in nitrogen. [1] Of all animal manures, it has the highest amount of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. [2] Chicken manure is sometimes pelletized for use as a fertilizer, and this product may have additional phosphorus, potassium or nitrogen added. [3]

  3. Poultry farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poultry_farming

    A common practice among hatcheries for egg-laying hens is the culling of newly hatched male chicks since they do not lay eggs and do not grow fast enough to be profitable for meat. There are plans to more ethically destroy the eggs before the chicks are hatched, using "in-ovo" sex determination.

  4. Poultry farming in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poultry_farming_in_the...

    Barred Plymouth Rock hen, No. 31S. laid 237 eggs in first year at the Maine Agricultural Experiment Station (1903) As the United States urbanized, demand for eggs grew. Eggs were sold into urban markets, where residents did not have chickens to provide eggs for themselves. [12]

  5. FACT FOCUS: Egg shortage breeds chicken-feed conspiracies - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/fact-focus-egg-shortage-breeds...

    The theory gained steam on Facebook, TikTok and Twitter in recent weeks, with some users reporting that their hens stopped laying eggs and speculating that common chicken feed products were the cause.

  6. Everything You Need to Know to Care for a "Hens and Chicks" Plant

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/everything-know-care-hens...

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  7. History of agriculture in California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_agriculture_in...

    2008 California Proposition 2 and 2018 California Proposition 12 both established minimum requirements for farming egg-laying hens, breeding pigs, and calves raised for veal. Few veal and pig factory farm operations exist in California, so these propositions mostly affect farmers who raise California's 15 million egg-laying hens. [28]

  8. Poultry feed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poultry_feed

    The quantity of feed, and the nutritional requirements of the feed, depend on the weight and age of the poultry, their rate of growth, their rate of egg production, the weather (cold or wet weather causes higher energy expenditure), and the amount of nutrition the poultry obtain from foraging. This results in a wide variety of feed formulations.

  9. Hen and chicks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hen_and_chicks

    The plants grow close to the ground with leaves formed around each other in a rosette, and propagating by offsets. The "hen" is the main, or mother, plant, and the "chicks" are a flock of offspring, [1] which start as tiny buds on the main plant and soon sprout their own roots, taking up residence close to the mother plant.