The world poultry industry is on the brink of dramatic developments

The 11th European Poultry Genetics Symposium was held from 23 to 25 October at the Prague Convention Center in the Czech Republic and featured highly advanced genetic research and research on the poultry industry.
The symposium, which was carefully arranged, arranged panels, speakers, and themes, with a total of 7 morning and afternoon sessions, consisted of 25 lectures of selected papers, along with other lectures by professors. And the invitations were held.
Speeches include research conducted by Dr. Jerry Heiner - Head of the Molecular Genetics Division of the Czech Science and Technology Research Center for the Control of the J Virus and in the near future the Mark Virus, the scope of which is in the field of influenza and Newcastle disease control. It will also be possible through GM.
Another promising evolution of male (W) gene deletion from laying hens results is that laying hens do not have sows and do not need to sex and eliminate sexed hens because all chickens eventually produce. They will be chicken. The speaker was Dr. Bental Cohen.
Another topic raised at the symposium was the production of dual-purpose herds that would have both substantial slaughter and substantial egg laying, ie at the age of 6 to 8 weeks the sows would be consumed as broilers and Their poultry will produce eggs after maturing up to 80% of the breeding hens.
The speaker of this fascinating study was Dr. Britt de Clerk, who was involved in the project with the collaboration of CobEurope and the Hendrix Institute of Genetics in Baxter, The Netherlands.