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The Veterinary Record, Vol 128, Issue 6, 127-128
Copyright © 1991 by British Veterinary Association


Papers & Articles

Efficiency of bleeding of broilers after gaseous or electrical stunning

AB Mohan Raj and NG Gregory

Department of Meat Animal Science, School of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford.

The efficiency of bleeding of broilers (g blood/kg liveweight) was measured after stunning them with either 45 per cent carbon dioxide in air for two minutes or with 2 per cent oxygen (achieved by displacing air with argon) for two minutes or with an electric current (77 or 104 mA at 50 Hz for four seconds). The results indicated that the initial rate of bleeding was higher in the electrically stunned broilers with non-fibrillated hearts than in the gas stunned broilers and electrically stunned broilers with fibrillated hearts. This difference was significant up to 60 seconds after neck cutting (P less than 0.05) but after 140 seconds all the broilers had bled out to a similar extent (30 to 33 g/kg liveweight). It is concluded that after gas stunning the time interval between neck cutting and scalding should be 60 to 140 seconds.





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Copyright © 1991 British Veterinary Association