Why On-Farm Feed Handling Hygiene Deserves More Scrutiny
Feed is one of the most frequent and direct exposures the gastrointestinal tract receives across a production cycle. Protecting feed hygienic quality from manufacture through to point of consumption preserves the value of upstream microbial controls, and when that protection breaks down, the consequences compound quietly. The feed mill has been identified as a meaningful point of microbial entry in broiler systems, with studies showing overlap between isolates detected upstream and those found later in processing. This highlights the importance of source control, while also recognizing that downstream reintroduction can reduce its full benefit.
For broilers, on-farm feed handling hygiene bears directly on feed conversion, body weight gain, mortality and flock uniformity, the same metrics that determine whether a placement is profitable. Feed quality deterioration post-manufacture also drives fines segregation within houses, meaning birds in the same shed are no longer consuming a nutritionally equivalent product.
In breeder and parent-stock systems, the stakes are especially high because feed hygiene can influence flock livability, reproductive output, and chick quality. Published University of Georgia research showed improved breeder livability, lower eggshell microbial load, and a higher proportion of Grade A chicks at hatch when hens received sanitized feed, while broader commercial experience points in the same general direction.
For layers and turkeys, the available evidence similarly suggests that lower microbial challenge in feed can support more consistent production outcomes, including improvements in egg output, shell hygiene, early-life performance, feed efficiency, and mortality. While outcomes vary by system and management conditions, the broader signal is that feed hygiene can contribute to stronger biological consistency across the production cycle.
Effective on-farm feed handling hygiene does not require novel technology. It requires consistent execution. Bins should be emptied and inspected before refill, with attention to leaks, condensation points and residual caked material. Feed spills around storage and transfer areas should be cleared promptly. Pest management should explicitly cover feed infrastructure, not bird housing alone. Augers, feed lines and feeders warrant routine review for dust, fines and stale material accumulation.
The basics, done reliably, are what keep manageable risks from becoming costly ones.
Feed sanitization reduces microbial load and pathogen risk upstream. Good on-farm feed handling hygiene preserves that reduction through consumption. When both operate together, producers are better positioned to protect gut health, livability, feed efficiency and food-safety outcomes across every production class. Feed hygiene is not a single event at manufacture. It is a chain of control points, and the chain is only as strong as its weakest link.