I've noticed that this year I'm hatching out a lot of cockerels. I'm also having trouble with my incubator holding the correct temperature so I wondered if there was any correlation between the two. Now, I know that many will say that your chances of hatching a cockerel vs a pullet or visa versa is 50/50. Just plain simple, 50/50. As sort of a science junkie, I know that is correct. The eggs should be 50/50, but what about the mortality rate of the embryo in the egg at varying temperatures?
So, I started doing some research and I found two studies (there are probably more, but I don't need to read more than the two) that show that in Turkeys (I'm going to experiment to see if it applies to chickens) that the mortality rate of females is higher when the temps are low in your incubator and that the mortality rate of males is higher when the temps in your incubator are higher. This correlates with what I found with my incubator this year. Since my incubator was having trouble holding a steady temperature, it was frequently cooling by a degree or two almost every day. Hence, more cockerels hatched.
I thought I would share this with anyone who is interested. Maybe they won't have to spend as much time as I did trying to find the research. Latest paper I found is here: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/275/1652/2703.full
You can read the references as well as they give some additional insight.
So, I started doing some research and I found two studies (there are probably more, but I don't need to read more than the two) that show that in Turkeys (I'm going to experiment to see if it applies to chickens) that the mortality rate of females is higher when the temps are low in your incubator and that the mortality rate of males is higher when the temps in your incubator are higher. This correlates with what I found with my incubator this year. Since my incubator was having trouble holding a steady temperature, it was frequently cooling by a degree or two almost every day. Hence, more cockerels hatched.
I thought I would share this with anyone who is interested. Maybe they won't have to spend as much time as I did trying to find the research. Latest paper I found is here: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/275/1652/2703.full
You can read the references as well as they give some additional insight.