Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-m8s7h Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-19T12:25:02.154Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Factors limiting production efficiency and profitability from smallholder poultry production

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2009

J.G. BELL*
Affiliation:
Community Based Avian Influenza Control Project, Gedung BRI II Suite 2807, Jl. Jend. Sudirman 44-46, Jakarta 10210, Indonesia
*
Corresponding author: Jonathan_Bell@dai.com
Get access

Abstract

The efficiency and profitability of family enterprises using indigenous poultry are limited by disease, production constraints, and external factors. The limitations caused by viral diseases, notably Newcastle disease, avian influenza, Gumboro disease and fowl pox, can be largely alleviated through the use of vaccination programmes adapted to the local prevalence of diseases. Once disease is controlled, feed becomes a significant limiting factor which judicious feeding of chicks during the first four weeks of life can overcome. Loss from predators can be addressed by suitable housing for young chicks. The number of eggs that can be incubated in each batch and the number of batches that can be raised by a hen each year can be countered through the provision of a suitable hatching trays, and interventions to stimulate a rapid return to lay by hens.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © World's Poultry Science Association 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

DOLBERG, F. (2007) Poultry Production for livelihood improvement and poverty alleviation. Presented at Poultry in the 21st Century, FAO Animal Production and Health Division, Bangkok, November 5-7 2007.Google Scholar
DWINGER, R.H. (2006) Improving farmyard poultry production in Africa: Interventions and their economic assessment. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna.Google Scholar
GREGER, M. (2006) Bird flu, a virus of our own hatching. Lantern Books, New York, NY.Google Scholar
PRASETYO, T., SUBIHARTA, W.D. and SABRABI, M. (1985) The effect of chick and hen separation on village chicken egg productivity. p.22, Research report 1984-1985, Research Institute for Animal Production, Bogor, Indonesia.Google Scholar
SARKAR, K. and GOLAM, M. (2009) A move from subsistence to semi-commercial family poultry farming with local chickens: effective strategies for family poultry in Bangladesh. World's Poultry Science Journal 65: 251-259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SHARMA, R.K. (2007) Role and relevance of rural family poultry in developing countries with special reference to India. Family Poultry 17: 35-40.Google Scholar