Below you will find an appropriate article for
Thanksgiving. I thought I would share the "Penn State" science and technology that goes into raising that turkey you will be enjoying for dinner on Thursday. Have a great holiday and a successful deer season to follow!
Julie Eble
November 15,
2016
.. ..
UNIVERSITY
PARK, Pa. — Thanksgiving is just around the corner, and for many families, that
means a turkey dinner with all the trimmings.
But for Mike
Hulet, associate professor of animal science, and others in Penn State's
Poultry Education and Research Center (PERC), it's also the culmination of the
science and technology that go into raising a better turkey.
Surrounded
by a border of locust and Austrian pine trees, the PERC consists of six
separate buildings that house turkeys and other poultry for education and
research. The vegetative barrier is used to help filter any possible odor,
dust, feathers and noise emitted from the poultry operations, and each house is
fully computerized and environmentally controlled.
"We can
maintain temperatures within a degree or two from the front to the back of the
houses," Hulet said, noting that the PERC manager can monitor temperature
changes through applications on his tablet or smartphone and make adjustments
remotely when necessary. Even on Penn State's hottest summer or coldest winter
days, the combination of computer-controlled, evaporative cooling (misting of
air into the building) and perpetual air exchange keeps the temperature in the
turkey houses within the optimum range: between 68 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit.
Because the
U.S. has developed birds that are very large — male turkeys can grow up to 70
pounds and females can grow up to 25 pounds — they can't efficiently mate
naturally, according to Hulet. As a result, researchers at the PERC use
sophisticated artificial insemination technologies to improve the turkey
fertilization process and incubation environment that can enable year-round
chick laying.
Once the
turkey hens are inseminated, their eggs are placed in one of the PERC's four
incubators, which can hold about 1,000 eggs each. While chicken hens are
egg-laying dynamos, dropping one egg almost every day, a turkey hen produces
only about four per week.
Systems for
automatic measurement of carbon dioxide, weight loss from eggs and exact
regulation of temperature are used in the PERC's incubation process. These data
are used to control the necessary heating, cooling, humidification and
ventilation of the incubation machines to maximize the environment for the
development of the embryo.
"We try
to mimic what old mother hen would do naturally and keep the shell temperature
within the incubator at 100 degrees Fahrenheit," said Hulet.
Performing
much like a brooding or sitting hen, the eggs in the incubator are turned
automatically each hour to ensure that the embryo doesn't get stuck to the
shell membrane, gases move around and the temperature is evenly distributed.
Alarm systems on the incubators also alert for any problem in the machines and
all necessary information is provided on a digital display. Everything is
connected to the manager's office so it can be monitored and controlled through
a central computer system.
To help
enhance the welfare of the turkeys and provide uniform growth, the lighting in
the turkey houses is also automated through a computer system with an optimized
color spectrum and dimming capability.
"Lighting
has been shown to be a key input in healthy poult (baby turkey)
development," said Hulet.
As a result,
the lights in the turkey houses at the PERC are initially set at a higher intensity
when the birds are first placed in the pens so they can find where the water
and feed are located. The light is later decreased as the turkeys get
accustomed to their surroundings. Hulet says this low-light spectrum output
helps to calm the turkeys and reduce injury.
For many
families, having turkey at Thanksgiving is a tradition that has been part of
the American culture for a long time.
In 2011,
there were 248.5 million turkeys raised in the U.S., including 7.5 million in
Pennsylvania, which made the Keystone State ninth out of the top 10
turkey-producing states, according to the National Turkey Federation.
"If
you're feeding a large group of people, a nice 22-pound turkey is the one
product you're able to share with everyone," said Hulet.
In the
1970s, only about half of turkey sales for the year were made during the
Thanksgiving holiday. But throughout the last 35 years, the turkey industry has
gone from mainly marketing a single-product consumed at holidays or special
occasions, to offering a diverse array of food choices ranging from sausages
and burgers to deli meats and more, according to the federation. In 2015, U.S.
consumption of turkey was 16.1 pounds per person. Increasingly, consumers are
including turkey in their daily diets because of its health benefits,
versatility and taste.
Regardless
of all the technology that goes into raising turkeys these days, Hulet says he
is looking forward to spending the Thanksgiving holiday with his adult
children.
"They'll
be cooking the turkey this year, but I always carve it to make sure I get my
favorite part of the bird — the dark meat of the legs and thighs — because it
has more flavor and tends to be moister as opposed to the white breast
meat," said Hulet. "There's nothing better than a turkey sandwich
with cranberry sauce the day after Thanksgiving."
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