| Literature DB >> 36078017 |
Rafiq Ahmad1, Yu-Hsiang Yu1, Felix Shih-Hsiang Hsiao1, Chin-Hui Su2, Hsiu-Chou Liu2, Isabel Tobin3, Guolong Zhang3, Yeong-Hsiang Cheng1.
Abstract
Heat stress has emerged as a serious threat to the global poultry industry due to climate change. Heat stress can negatively impact the growth, gut health, immune function, and production and reproductive performances of poultry. Different strategies have been explored to mitigate heat stress in poultry; however, only a few have shown potential. Probiotics are gaining the attention of poultry nutritionists, as they are capable of improving the physiology, gut health, and immune system of poultry under heat stress. Therefore, application of probiotics along with proper management are considered to potentially help negate some of the negative impacts of heat stress on poultry. This review presents scientific insight into the impact of heat stress on poultry health and growth performance as well as the application of probiotics as a promising approach to alleviate the negative effects of heat stress in poultry.Entities:
Keywords: body temperature; poultry; reproduction; strategies; thermoregulation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078017 PMCID: PMC9454943 DOI: 10.3390/ani12172297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Figure 1Effects of heat stress on growth, behavioral, and physiological traits.
Effect of heat stress on poultry performance.
| Species | Conditions | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broiler chicken | 32 °C | Excessive panting, elevated wings, ground squatting, standing, sleeping, sitting, and drinking, reduced feeding, body weight, AFI, and high FCR | [ |
| Broiler chicken | 30 °C | Decreased body weight, body gain weight, reduced growth hormone level, Insulin-like growth factor-1, increased cholesterol and glucose level, decreased villus height, crypt depth and villus surface area, and high FCR | [ |
| Layers (Hen) | 34 °C, | Decreased feed intake, egg production, decreased villus height, crypt depth, and villus surface area | [ |
| Layer | 34 ± 2 °C | Decreased feed intake, low egg production, eggshell thickness, eggshell strength, and less egg weight | [ |
| Layer (Hen) | 35 °C, | Decreased feed intake, weight gain, egg weight, and eggshell thickness | [ |
| Japanese quails (12 weeks old) | 35.8 ± 0.6 °C | Fertility 78.9% | [ |
| Japanese laying quail | 34 °C | Feed intake decreased by 7.1% | [ |
| Egg-laying sheld duck | 34 °C, | Feed intake decreased by 11.9% | [ |
| Shanma duck | 34 ± 1 °C | Decreased feed intake, reduced egg weight, lower egg albumen height, and Haugh unit | [ |
| Turkey | 35 °C | Decrease T3 (37.5%) | [ |
Figure 2Effect of heat stress on intestinal health and immune system.
Example of different types of probiotics and their application in poultry to ameliorate intestinal morphology under heat-stressed conditions.
| Probiotic Strains | Biological Performance under Heat Stress Conditions | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Increased the population of | [ | |
|
| Restored the impaired villus-crypt structure and maintained normal surface area in the small intestine (laying hens) | [ |
| Probiotic mixture ( | Reversed the reduced villus height, crypt depth, and surface area structure (broiler chicken) | [ |
| Probiotic mixture ( | Increased the population of beneficial bacteria | [ |