| Literature DB >> 34222395 |
Elske N de Haas1,2, Eva Oliemans1, Maite A A M van Gerwen1,3.
Abstract
A concerning by-product of producing laying hen chicks are the hatched male layer chicks. As a consequence of their inability to lay eggs, these male chicks are culled as day-old chicks in the hatchery. To find an alternative for this ethical dilemma (generally), three alternatives are under study, namely, in ovo sex determination, using dual-purpose breeds, and the rearing of layer cockerels. In order to assess the awareness of this practice and preference for one of the alternatives, we conducted an online survey of the Dutch public. Most of the 259 respondents completing the survey were highly educated woman (HEW, n = 143) versus others (REST, n = 86). The questionnaire was divided into six topics: (1) general knowledge of the poultry industry, (2) awareness of culling male layer chicks (CMC), and (3) its acceptability, (4) alternatives to CMC, (5) willingness to pay (WTP) for eggs without CMC, and (6) WTP for cockerel meat. Awareness about CMC was 52%, and its acceptability was rejected by 78% (HEW) and 67% (REST). The level of acceptability increased when more salient facts were given, and almost all respondents agreed that an alternative was needed (90% HEW, 84% REST). For both groups of respondents, more than 50% preferred in ovo sex determination over keeping the current practice or using dual-purpose breeds or male layers. Furthermore, the majority of respondents were willing to pay more than double the price for eggs without CMC being involved. Roughly 40% would not buy processed cockerel meat burgers, most likely due to their vegan or vegetarian diet. Of the remaining respondents, half were willing to pay the current price or 1 euro more for processed cockerel meat burgers. The most important factors when buying poultry meat or eggs without CMC were food safety, animal friendliness (welfare), and the environment; price was the least important factor. Despite the skewed respondents' background, the results of our survey show that consumers are willing to pay more for poultry products that do not require culling day-old male chicks.Entities:
Keywords: chicken; day-old chicks; dual-purpose chicken; in-ovo sexing; male layer chicks; willingness-to-pay
Year: 2021 PMID: 34222395 PMCID: PMC8248538 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.662197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Additional information given in the survey on culling day old male layer chicks.
| The poultry industry is specialized. Chickens for meat and chickens for eggs. This survey is aimed to test your knowledge and opinion on eating cockerel meat | At the start of the questionnaire | 1–8.Paragraph 1. Knowledge on the poultry industry |
| In the Netherlands, 90,000,000 chickens are kept yearly. 45,000,000 chickens for meat and 45,000,000 chickens for eggs. Because cockerels of layer chicken do not lay eggs they are culled at the hatchery. Once chicks hatch sex is determined manually by a specialist. Once the sex is determined to be male, male layer chicks are culled via CO2 asphyxiation. Yearly 45,000,000 male layer chicks are culled.The culled chicks are used for zoos, reptiles and birds of prey and other animals. | After first paragraph of questions regarding the numbers of chicken in the Netherlands, which day old male chicks are culled (broiler and layer or only layer), the sexing method, the method of culling and what happens with the culled male layer chicks. | 9–12Paragraph 2. Acceptance of culling day old chicks |
| Culling day old chicks is causing a discussion on animal and ethics. Research is being conducted on alternatives for culling day old layer males. In this survey we look at three alternatives. We consider herein the perspective of keeping the animals under the highest welfare conditions.1. Keeping layer males for special cockerel meat products.2. Double purpose chickens for keeping the cockerels for meat and the hens for egg production.3. Sex determination of the embryo in the egg. With a needle fluid is being taken from the embryo which is used to determine the sex. Male embryos will be excluded from further development and used in animal feed. | After paragraph 2. Acceptance of culling day old chicks. | 13Paragraph 3. Acceptance of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks19Paragraph 4. Preference of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks |
| Broiler chickens are slaughtered at 6 weeks of age. When cockerels of layer breeds will be kept for meat this takes ~15 weeks, because they take longer to grow. The feed and care costs are higher as compared to broiler chicken. This makes the meat of these layer cockerels more expensive than meat of broiler chicken. Meat from cockerel layers is less tender than meat from broiler chicken, and therefore the meat is processed into sausages or burgers. | After paragraph 2. Acceptance of culling day old chicks. | 13–18Paragraph 3. Acceptance of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks19Paragraph 4. Preference of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks |
| A double purpose chicken is a chicken breed which can be used for meat and eggs. The meat of double purpose chicken is more expensive because they do not grow as fast at the broiler chicken. The feed and care costs for double purpose chicken are higher as compared to the broiler chicken. | After paragraph 2. Acceptance of culling day old chicks. | 13–18Paragraph 3. Acceptance of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks19Paragraph 4. Preference of alternatives to culling day old male layer chicks |
| Layer cockerel meat is mainly being used for sausages and burgers. This is currently the cockerel burger from layer cockerels available in one specific supermarket chain. | After question 31 in Paragraph 6. Willingness to pay for chicken products | 32 |
Socio-demographic characteristics of subset 1: Highly educated women.
| 21–30 | 39 | 27.3 | 12.7 |
| 31–40 | 38 | 26.6 | 12.2 |
| 41–50 | 31 | 21.7 | 13.1 |
| >50 | 35 | 24.5 | 14.5 |
| Low (< € 29.999) | 37 | 25.9 | 60.7 |
| Middle (€30.000–€49.999) | 37 | 25.9 | 31.9 |
| High (>€50.000) | 41 | 28.7 | 7.4 |
| Unknown | 28 | 19.6 | |
| South NL | 20 | 14 | 21.2 |
| Urban South-West | 39 | 27.3 | 37.8 |
| Utrecht | 36 | 25.2 | 7.8 |
| North NL | 20 | 14 | 14.8 |
| Gelderland | 28 | 19.6 | 12.0 |
All 143 respondents in subset 1 were women with a high education level (University degree)
Dutch Central Bureau for Statistics (CBS statline), accessed August 2020. Income: Low: < € 29.999; Middle: €30.000–€49.999; High: >€50.000 (per year per household). NL, The Netherlands.
Socio-demographic characteristics of subset 2: REST.
| Men | 65 | 75.6 | 49.6 |
| Women | 21 | 24.4 | 50.3 |
| Middle | 48 | 55.8 | 36.7 |
| High (University) | 38 | 44.2 | 32.3 |
| 21–30 | 17 | 19.8 | 12.7 |
| 31–40 | 21 | 24.4 | 12.2 |
| 41–50 | 12 | 14.0 | 13.1 |
| 51–60 | 18 | 20.9 | 14.5 |
| 60+ | 18 | 20.9 | 25.3 |
| Low (< € 29.999) | 22 | 25.6 | 60.7 |
| Middle (€30.000–€49.999) | 21 | 24.4 | 31.9 |
| High (>€50.000) | 31 | 36.0 | 7.4 |
| Unknown | 12 | 14.0 | |
| Urban South-West | 28 | 32.6 | 37.8 |
| Utrecht | 20 | 23.3 | 7.8 |
| South NL | 12 | 14.0 | 21.2 |
| Gelderland | 26 | 30.2 | 12.0 |
Dutch Central Bureau for Statistics (CBS statline), accessed August 2020. NL, The Netherlands.
Figure 1Percentage of respondents correctly answering general knowledge questions/statements on the poultry industry, its practices and the culling of day-old males correctly.
Mean and median outcomes for 10 agree/disagree questions rated on a Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree) regarding the acceptability of practices in the poultry industry.
| The culling of day-old male layer chicks is a good solution. | 1.72 | 1 | 2.24 | 2 |
| There is no problem with culling day-old male layer chicks. | 1.66 | 1 | 2.13 | 2 |
| The culling of day-old male layer chicks is inevitable. | 1.87 | 2 | 2.37 | 2 |
| Day-old male layer chicks may be culled | 2.07 | 2 | 2.45 | 2 |
| Because day-old male layer chicks have another use, this eliminates the need for an alternative to CMC. | 2.01 | 2 | 2.41 | 2 |
| Chickens can be kept for food production. | 3.52 | 4 | 3.92 | 4 |
| An alternative is needed for the culling of day-old male layer chicks. | 4.49 | 5 | 4.22 | 4 |
| The use of dual-purpose breeds is a good alternative to the culling of day-old male layer chicks. | 3.41 | 4 | 3.24 | 3 |
| Rearing male layers is a good alternative to the culling of day-old male layer chicks. | 3.51 | 4 | 3.47 | 4 |
| In-ovo sex determination is a good alternative to the culling of day-old male layer chicks. | 3.85 | 4 | 3.85 | 4 |
Likert scale used here: 1 = strongly disagree, 2 = disagree, 3 = neutral, 4 = agree, 5 = strongly agree.
Figure 2Percentage of respondents' agreement on culling day-old male chicks at the beginning of the survey and at the end. Q20 “Day-old males may be culled”; Q44 “In this survey you received information about the poultry industry and its practices. To what extent do you agree that day cockerels are killed?” Highly educated women (n = 143), Rest (n = 86).
Figure 3Percentage of respondents' preference of alternative to culling day-old male chicks (A) Highly educated woman (n = 143) and (B) Remaining group of respondent (n = 86).
Chi-square test-statistics representing effects of income levels, education level, awareness levels and change in acceptance of culling day-old male layer chicks on alternatives for this practice.
| Income level | ||||||||
| Education level | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. | N.D. | ||||
| Awareness | ||||||||
| Change in acceptability | ||||||||
HEW, subset highly educated woman; REST, remaining subset; N.D., not determined only one education level in this subset. Bold represent significant factors.
Ranking of determining factors when buying eggs or poultry meat (rated on Likert scale 1–5).
| Food safety | 5.86 | 5.84 |
| Animal friendliness | 5.62 | 5.48 |
| Environment | 5.18 | 4.87 |
| Naturalness | 4.76 | 4.76 |
| Taste | 4.43 | 4.70 |
| Feasibility | 4.17 | 4.48 |
| Availability of the product | 3.15 | 3.25 |
| Price | 2.83 | 2.62 |
Factors were not explicitly defined. Highly educated women Friedman's test: X.
Figure 4The percentage of respondents and their willingness to pay an absolute price for cockerel meat burgers in (A) Highly educated woman (n = 143) and (B) Remaining group of respondent (n = 86).
Surveys on culling day-old male layer chicks.
| Current study | July-Aug 2020 | Online survey 34 questions | 259 | 52% | 67.3–78.8% | 6–10% rearing male layers 23–29% DP chicken 51–57% in-ovo sex determination |
| Reithmayer et al. ( | Dec-March 2019 Germany | 26 min Online survey 26 questions | 482, given a small financial incentive | N.S. | 89% | N.D. rearing male layers N.D. DP chicken Different in-ovo sex determination techniques: 48% |
| Reithmayer and MuBhoff ( | 2018 Germany | Online survey, 4 parts, DCE | 400, given a financial incentive | N.D. | N.D. | 27% DP chicken 0% rearing male layers 75% in-ovo sex determination |
| Busse et al. ( | 2016 Germany | 20-min telephone interviews, 43 questions | 1,000 consumers of an organic farming initiative | 70% | 67% | N.D. Rearing male layers 50% DP chicken N.D. in-ovo sex determination |
| Gremmen et al. ( | Oct-Dec 2015 The Netherlands | Online survey | 1,022 | 55% | 47% | 41.3% DP chicken 41.3% rearing layer males 37.5–43.2% |
| Gangnat et al. ( | Jan-Feb 2016 Switzerland | 10-min survey on DP, at 8 supermarkets, 18 questions, text, photos, ruler for WTP | 402 | 25% | N.D. % but preference for in-ovo sex determination over CMC | N.D. % alternatives N.D. Rearing male layers No preference for DP over CMC Preference for in-ovo sex determination over CMC |
| Leenstra et al. ( | N.S. The Netherlands | Online survey | 1,199 | 42% | 58% | 24% DP chicken N.D. rearing male layers 25% in-ovo sex determination |
Dataset divided in Highly Educated Women (n = 143) and REST (n = 85). N.S., Not specified; N.D., not determined;
Survey made with use of a valorization panel: stakeholders (farmer representatives), consumers; retail and animal protection organizations, n = 10;
overrepresentation of highly educated people and 50–69 age group;
different types of in ovo sex determination were examined (genetic modification, invasive and non-invasive methods);
DCE: discrete choice experiment; choose between 2 or more alternatives,
Respondents were either given questions focussed on eggs or on chicken;
Survey made with use of 6 focus groups with 6–7 people, tested on 44 students.