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  2. Chickens and dogs aren't the most natural pairing. Although they surely do live together from time to time. Just take the testy way that a chicken named Popcorn reacted to its dog brother.

  3. Chick culling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chick_culling

    Due to modern selective breeding, laying hen strains differ from meat production strains . In the United States, males are culled in egg production because males "don't lay eggs or grow large enough to become broilers." [4] Ducklings and goslings are also culled in the production of foie gras.

  4. Echidnophaga gallinacea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echidnophaga_gallinacea

    Echidnophaga gallinacea, also known as the hen flea or sticktight flea, is part of the 2,500 known flea types in the Siphonaptera order. Echidnophaga gallinacea appear dark brown in colour and is a small flea measuring approximately 2 millimetres in length, which is half the size of the common cat flea . [ 1 ]

  5. Chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken

    The UK alone consumes more than 34 million eggs per day. [84] Hens of some breeds can produce over 300 eggs per year; the highest authenticated rate of egg laying is 371 eggs in 364 days. [85] After 12 months of laying, the commercial hen's egg-laying ability declines to the point where the flock is commercially unviable.

  6. Cannibalism in poultry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cannibalism_in_poultry

    Another study found that brown-egg laying hens are more likely to engage in feather pecking than white-egg laying hens. [1] The genetics of poultry will not guarantee a bird will engage in cannibalism, but the genes a bird possesses play a part in the degree of aggressiveness a bird could engage in feather pecking and increases their risk ...

  7. Broodiness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broodiness

    With domestication, it has become more profitable to incubate eggs artificially, while keeping hens in full egg production. To help achieve this, there has been intense artificial selection for non-broodiness in commercial egg laying chickens and parent stock of poultry. As a result of this artificial selection, broodiness has been reduced to ...

  8. Sussex chicken - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sussex_chicken

    In the early part of the twentieth century, it was one of the principal breeds kept for this purpose, until it was displaced by modern industrial hybrid lines. It may be kept as a dual-purpose bird. Hens lay some 180–200 tinted eggs per year; some layer strains may give up to 250. [7] The eggs weigh about 60 g. [9]

  9. Red Shaver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Shaver

    Red shaver hens can lay from 305 to 315 eggs a year, [3] and are reported to be prolific producers of large brown eggs. One four-year-old Red Shaver chicken in Ottawa was credited with laying an egg with a mass of 143 grams, which is almost three times the size of a standard medium egg (Typically a medium egg is 49 g, a jumbo egg is 70 g).