Monday, January 4, 2021

Tanzania: New Tech to Determine Chicken Weight to Benefit Farmers

THE Tanzania Livestock Research Institute (Taliri) has come up with a new technology to determine chicken body weight, which they say, will help farmers to sell their chickens depending on their actual weight unlike before.

The new tech was researched and developed by Taliri-Mpwapwa Centre scientist Mary Magonka.

Presenting the findings before a team of researchers and reporters during training coordinated by Tanzania Commission for Science and Technology (Costech) recently, Ms Magonka said chickens were sold on face value and not on actual weight, thus reducing farmers' bargaining power for price and market value.

With the new findings, farmers will now sell their chickens using scientific measurements to determine the weight, a move that will make them benefit from poultry farming after spending more time on it, adding that a marketing system would now be formalised.

According to Ms Magonka, the main objective of this study is to determine the relationship between body weight and linear body measurements of chickens and develop regression equations for predicting the body weight.

"At least 119 improved chickens (Sasso) aged 20 weeks of both sexes were involved in the study and 62 of them were roosters, while 57 were hens," she noted.

She explained that a simple and multiple regression model was used to measure the regression of body parameters on body weight.

The results, according to her, suggest that there is a positive correlation coefficient between body weight and other body measurements.

In addition, the findings suggest that the chest circumference and body length have high and positive correlation coefficient to body weight.

Tanzania is home to some 83 million chickens, according to the 2019/20 Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries Census conducted by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

According to the census, about 75.1 million chickens were owned by smallholders and 12.6 million chickens were owned by large-scale farmers. Zanzibar had 3.1 million chickens in the same period.

Some farmers say the new findings suggest that they are likely to improve the performance of their business.

 

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