Broiler Hatchery ISSN: 1949-1840 Released February 16, 2011, by the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Agricultural Statistics Board, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Broiler-Type Eggs Set Down Slightly Commercial hatcheries in the 19 State weekly program set 205 million eggs in incubators during the week ending February 12, 2011. This was down slightly from the eggs set the corresponding week a year earlier. Average hatchability for chicks hatched during the week was 83 percent. Average hatchability is calculated by dividing chicks hatched during the week by eggs set three weeks earlier. Broiler-Type Chicks Placed Up 2 Percent Broiler growers in the 19 State weekly program placed 168 million chicks for meat production during the week ending February 12, 2011. Placements were up 2 percent from the comparable week a year earlier. Cumulative placements from January 2, 2011 through February 12, 2011 were 1.01 billion, up 1 percent from the same period a year earlier. Broiler-Type Eggs Set - 19 Selected States: 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Week ending State :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : January 8, : January 15, : January 22, : January 29, : February 5, :February 12, : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 1,000 eggs : Alabama ......................: 30,015 29,953 29,923 30,422 29,855 30,143 Arkansas .....................: 23,080 23,176 23,503 22,481 23,426 22,979 Delaware .....................: 4,098 4,014 4,040 4,039 3,980 3,768 Florida ......................: 1,307 1,360 1,343 1,341 1,360 1,360 Georgia ......................: 32,949 32,769 32,685 33,059 33,628 33,723 Kentucky .....................: 7,253 7,389 6,879 8,065 8,006 8,025 Louisiana ....................: 3,348 3,395 3,395 3,287 3,395 3,395 Maryland .....................: 7,672 7,672 7,593 7,635 7,695 7,714 Mississippi ..................: 18,789 18,805 18,733 18,404 18,965 18,376 North Carolina ...............: 19,932 19,943 19,851 19,729 19,464 19,636 : Oklahoma .....................: 7,034 7,207 7,049 7,016 6,974 7,181 Pennsylvania .................: 4,031 4,073 4,073 3,892 3,914 4,006 South Carolina ...............: 5,639 5,553 5,544 5,673 5,452 5,579 Texas ........................: 15,528 15,510 15,082 14,404 14,320 14,234 Virginia .....................: 6,000 5,979 5,641 5,905 5,971 6,081 California, Missouri, : Tennessee, and West Virginia : 18,744 18,301 18,782 18,240 19,266 18,624 : 19 State total ...............: 205,419 205,099 204,116 203,592 205,671 204,824 : Previous year total ..........: 202,247 200,307 202,034 202,304 204,076 205,734 : Percent of previous year .....: 102 102 101 101 101 100 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Broiler-Type Chicks Placed - 19 Selected States: 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Week ending State :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : January 8, : January 15, : January 22, : January 29, : February 5, :February 12, : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 : 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 1,000 chicks : Alabama ......................: 20,649 21,063 20,692 21,000 20,856 20,903 Arkansas .....................: 20,616 20,231 22,119 20,707 20,823 21,034 Delaware .....................: 4,938 4,875 5,689 4,420 5,002 4,670 Florida ......................: 1,387 1,269 1,230 1,224 1,229 1,536 Georgia ......................: 27,955 27,733 27,123 27,323 27,749 26,875 Kentucky .....................: 5,545 5,917 5,758 5,600 5,742 6,028 Louisiana ....................: 2,935 2,962 2,977 2,915 3,002 3,014 Maryland .....................: 5,937 5,796 4,866 5,928 5,885 5,775 Mississippi ..................: 16,131 16,168 16,247 16,190 16,293 16,123 North Carolina ...............: 15,388 16,030 14,841 15,534 15,446 15,715 : Oklahoma .....................: 4,424 4,953 3,515 4,244 5,481 5,162 Pennsylvania .................: 3,237 3,168 3,236 3,207 3,302 3,301 South Carolina ...............: 4,915 4,315 5,123 4,728 4,455 4,805 Texas ........................: 13,371 13,218 12,879 13,006 13,054 12,668 Virginia .....................: 4,329 4,568 4,886 5,202 4,971 4,966 California, Missouri, : Tennessee, and West Virginia : 16,660 15,954 16,326 17,242 14,669 15,104 : 19 State total ...............: 168,417 168,220 167,507 168,470 167,959 167,679 : Previous year total ..........: 166,836 167,240 166,113 165,437 163,279 164,631 : Percent of previous year .....: 101 101 101 102 103 102 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Statistical Methodology Survey Procedures: Data for broiler hatchery estimates are collected from all known chicken hatcheries within the 19 States. The 19 States account for approximately 97 percent of the broilers produced on an annual basis. Individual NASS field offices maintain a list of all known hatcheries and update their lists on a continual basis. All known hatcheries within the 19 States respond via fax. Those that do not respond are contacted by telephone. Estimating Procedures: All data are analyzed for unusual values. Data from each operation are compared to their own past operating profile and to trends from similar operations. All hatcheries are accounted for in the estimates. Data for missing operations are estimated based on similar operations or historical data. NASS field offices prepare these estimates by using a combination of survey indications and historic trends. Individual State estimates are reviewed by the Agricultural Statistics Board for reasonableness. Individual hatchery data are summed to State and 19 State totals. Revision Policy: Revisions are generally the result of late or corrected data. Revisions made to the previous five-week's data during the current week are published in this report. Final estimates are published in the annual Hatchery Production Summary released in April. Reliability: Hatchery estimates are based on a census of all known operating hatcheries and therefore, have no sampling error. However, estimates are subject to errors such as omission, duplication, and mistakes in reporting, recording, and processing the data. While these errors cannot be measured directly, they are minimized through strict quality controls in the data collection process and a careful review of all reported data for consistency and reasonableness. Information Contacts Listed below are the commodity specialists in the Livestock Branch of the National Agricultural Statistics Service to contact for additional information. E-mail inquiries may be sent to nass@nass.usda.gov Dan Kerestes, Chief, Livestock Branch .......................................... (202) 720-3570 Bruce Boess, Head, Poultry and Specialty Commodities Section ................... (202) 720-4447 Doug Bounds - Poultry Slaughter, Turkey Hatchery, Turkeys Raised ............ (202) 690-3237 David Colwell - Cold Storage ................................................ (202) 720-8784 Chris Hawthorn - Catfish Processing, Catfish Production, Trout Production, Census of Aquaculture, Egg Products, Mink .. (202) 720-0585 Kim Linonis - Layers, Eggs .................................................. (202) 690-8632 Troy Marshall - Broiler Hatchery, Chicken Hatchery, Honey ................... (202) 720-3244 Access to NASS Reports For your convenience, you may access NASS reports and products the following ways: All reports are available electronically, at no cost, on the NASS web site: http://www.nass.usda.gov Both national and state specific reports are available via a free e- mail subscription. To set-up this free subscription, visit http://www.nass.usda.gov and in the "Receive NASS Updates" box under "Receive reports by Email," click on "National" or "State" to select the reports you would like to receive. Printed reports may be purchased from the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) by calling toll-free (800) 999-6779, or (703) 605-6220 if calling from outside the United States or Canada. Accepted methods of payment are Visa, MasterCard, check, or money order. For more information on NASS surveys and reports, call the NASS Agricultural Statistics Hotline at (800) 727-9540, 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, or e-mail: nass@nass.usda.gov. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, political beliefs, genetic information, reprisal, or because all or a part of an individual's income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W., Stop 9410, Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call toll-free at (866) 632-9992 (English) or (800) 877-8339 (TDD) or (866) 377- 8642 (English Federal-relay) or (800) 845-6136 (Spanish Federal-relay). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.