Poultry
Sexing of day-old chicks
Sexing day-old chicks can be accomplished by one of two methods: 1) vent sexing or 2) feather sexing. Each method has difficulties that make it unsuitable for use by the small flock owner. Vent sexing relys on the visual identification of sex based on appearance of sexual organs. Feather sexing is based on differences in feather characteristics at hatch time. A brief explanation of each method is as follows.
Vent sexing of chicks at hatching has complications that make it more difficult than sex determination of most other animals. The reason is that the sexual organs of birds are located within the body and are not easily distinguishable. The copulatory organ of chickens can be identified as male or female by shape, but there are over fifteen different different shapes to consider. Therefore, few people have experience with determining the sex of birds because of the difficult nature of the process. Most of these highly trained individuals are employed by large commercial hatcheries. The training to be a chick sexer is so difficult and lengthy that the average poultry owner finds it unjustifiable.
Feather sexing is based on feather characteristics that differ between male and female chicks. The method is very easy to learn by the poultryman, but the feather appearances are determined by specially selected genetic traits that must be present in the chick strain. Most strains (breeds) of chickens do not have these feather sexing characteristics and feathering of both sexes appear identical.
The most convenient method of sexing chickens by the small flock owner is to care for the birds until they begin showing the natural secondary characteristics of their sex. In males, the combs and wattles will become larger than those on females and the head will become more angular and masculine looking. The female will remain smaller than the male and is more refined or feminine looking. In some varieties the feathers of each sex will develop a characteristic color pattern that identifies it. These varieties of birds are similar to the feather-sex strains of chickens discussed above. Sexing based on secondary sex characteristics can usually be performed after chicks attain 4 to 6 weeks of age.
Poultry
- Best Breeds of Chickens
- Breeds and varieties of chickens
- Causes for hens eating their eggs
- Causes of pecking and cannibalism
- Causes of Poor Feathering
- Chick removal from hatchery
- Commercial Poultry
- Constructing a Plywood Incubator
- Constructing a Polystyrene Incubator
- Construction of a still-air incubator
- Contents of chicken egg
- Culling Hens
- Disease and Pest Control
- Diseases of Poultry
- FAQ
- Feeds and Nutrition
- Fumigation and sanitation of hatching eggs
- Game Birds and Ratites
- General characteristics of Disinfectants
- Good management of egg producing hens
- Hatchery Management Guide for Game Bird and Small Poultry Flock Owners
- Hatching egg storage period
- How long to produce fertile eggs?
- Important incubation factors
- Incubation duration periods
- Incubation temperature requirements
- Management of egg producing hens
- Mistakes When Grilling Broilers
- Molting of laying hens
- Pesticides
- Pesticides Used for Control of Poultry Insect Pests
- Pipped eggs that do not hatch
- Quail Brooding Temperatures
- Quail Feed Formulations
- Quail Feed Medications
- Quail Feeding Programs
- Quail Pox
- Reproduction & Incubation
- Sanitation of hatching eggs
- Sexing of day-old chicks
- Small Flock Management
- Solutions and Treatments
- Space needs of Bobwhite Quail
- Stages in chick embryo development
- Stimulating the setting instinct
- Temperatures recommended for brooding quail
- Testing incubated eggs for embryo development
- Time hens continue to produce fertile eggs
- Treatments for External Poultry Parasites
- Treatments for Poultry Parasites
- Trouble Shooting Failures with Egg Incubation
- Ulcerative Enteritis in Quail
- Washing of hatching eggs
- Why do hens stop laying eggs?
- Will all hens set on eggs?