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Meat and egg science

Effect of the method of killing, interval between killing and neck cutting and blood vessels cut on blood loss in broilers

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Pages 190-194 | Accepted 13 Sep 1996, Published online: 08 Nov 2007
 

Abstract

1. Broiler chickens were killed using 90% argon in air, or 30% carbon dioxide and 60% argon in air or 120 mA per bird in a waterbath with a 50 Hz alternating electric current. Ventral or unilateral neck cutting was performed at 1, 3 or 5 min after killing. In addition, a group of broilers was stunned with 120 mA per bird in a waterbath using 1500 Hz alternating current and were bled out with a ventral neck cut within 20 s from stunning.

2. Blood leaving the neck wound was collected in a bin placed on an electronic balance and a computer program calculated the cumulative blood loss up to 100 s after neck cutting.

3. Bleed‐out was significantly affected by killing method and time of neck cutting. Broilers killed with the carbon dioxide‐argon mixture bled‐out less than those killed with argon or 50 Hz electric current. When compared with the 1 min neck cutting interval, a delay of 3 or 5 min resulted in a lower bleed‐out. High frequency electrical stunning and ventral neck cutting within 20 s resulted in a slightly higher bleed‐out than those recorded for the killing methods. However, within argon killing, a delay of 3 or 5 min in ventral or unilateral neck cutting had no significant effect on the bleed‐out. In broilers killed with the carbon dioxide‐argon mixture a 3 min delay in ventral neck cutting or a 5 min delay in unilateral neck cutting resulted in lower bleed‐out.

4. Neck cutting of broilers within 5 min after argon killing or 3 min after killing with the carbon dioxide‐argon mixture would result in a satisfactory bleed‐out.

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