Incubators | Incubator | Incubation
This informaton may help on your incubation and inprove hatching.
Incubation Tips
Incubation
Growing embryos need oxygen and give off carbon dioxide. The method of gas exchange does not have to be sophisticated as natural convection with hot air rising, removing the carbon dioxide through air holes in the top of the incubator, drawing in oxygen from below, works well. Some incubators are fan assisted both to even out the air temperature and facilitate the entry of oxygen.
Turning eggs when they are incubating is vital so that the egg is incubated evenly and the embryo does not get stuck. How many times a day are necessary? It have been proven that more turning equals better hatching. This can be carried out automatically, but a minimum of five times a day is recommended if turning by hand. Some incubators are semi-automatic which means you push a leaver, turning the eggs on a grid. This is preferable to handling each egg, losing temperature and possibly introducing all sorts of undesirable bacteria from your hands. Other incubators are fully automatic, and have processes which turn the eggs continuously (we recommend our fully automatic models but please contact us if you need further advice).
Positioning of the incubator in a room where the temperature does not fluctuate either up (sun through a window?) or down too greatly will help the machine maintain accuracy on temperature. The careless removal of the electric plug and its non return is an avoidable danger, whereas the effect of power cuts can be minimised by covering the machine with a blanket until the power returns. Hatching eggs will tolerate short periods of low temperature, but are quickly killed by high temperatures.
The humidity must be as high as possible at hatching in order to keep the membrane under the shell moist and therefore easy for the chick to split it open. At twenty days for the chickens the humidity needs to be 80%.
The candling of eggs (we have many units depending on egg density) is a good way to see how sucessfully you are progressing. It originated by the holding of an egg in front of a candle in order to see through the shell, and the same principle, albeit with slightly more sophisticated equipment, still holds true. Practice on white shelled eggs as it is very easy to see exactly how the embryo is developing. Remember that the eggs are losing heat while you are marvelling at the life inside. The development of the air space will tell you if the humidity is correct, and of course you will be able to discard those eggs which for one reason or another have either stopped developing or are fertile. Candling three times during hen egg incubation is normal practice.
This is also important from the cleaning aspect, as the bacteria produced at hatching can infect eggs which are not ready to hatch. It is better to either have an all in, all out system or use two incubators, one as a setter and the other as a hatcher which can then be steralised before the next hatch. P&T Incubator Disinfectant is a siutable disinfectant for cleaning incubators as it controls all the known families of bacteria and viruses but is not either to the operator of the eggs. Incubators should be cleaned between each hatch.
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