Heat Stress for Harare Broiler Farmers
While Harare does not face extreme heat stress year-round, October to February requires active monitoring. FarmIQ's daily mortality logging catches heat-related death spikes on the day they occur. If daily deaths double from your recent trend, the response is immediate ventilation increase, cold water provision, and feed withdrawal during peak afternoon heat.
This page covers Heat Stress specifically for Harare conditions. For the complete Zimbabwe-wide guide:
Read the full Heat Stress guide for Zimbabwe →Signs of Heat Stress
Panting (open-beak breathing), first sign. Wings held away from body. Reduced feed intake (birds eat early morning and evening, avoid midday). Increased water consumption. Clustering near ventilation points. Sudden mortality in the hottest part of the afternoon. Pale combs and wattles in layers. These signs appear hours before death, act immediately.
Emergency Heat Response
1. Increase ventilation immediately, open all possible vents, run fans at full speed. 2. Provide cold water, add ice if available. Electrolytes (sodium, potassium) help recovery. 3. Reduce stocking density if possible, move birds out. 4. Wet the roof of the shed externally. 5. Reduce lighting to reduce activity and metabolic heat. 6. In extreme cases: manually spray birds with fine mist (not soaking). Do not feed birds during peak heat, digestion generates additional metabolic heat.
Structural Solutions for Zimbabwe Conditions
Orient sheds east–west to minimise afternoon sun on long walls. Deep roof overhangs of 1.5m+ shade walls and reduce radiant heat. Insulated roofing (iron sheets trap heat, use cement fibre board or add insulation). Ridge ventilation running the full length of the shed. Cross-ventilation minimum 1m²/100 birds of inlet area. Shade trees planted on south and west sides reduce ambient temperature by 2–4°C over 5 years.
Breed Selection for Hot Regions
Hubbard Classic outperforms Cobb 500 in sustained heat environments. The performance penalty (slightly lower FCR, slightly lighter day-42 weight) is more than offset by lower heat mortality in the Lowveld. If you're in Bulawayo, Masvingo, or Matabeleland and losing 8–12% birds per cycle to heat stress, the first intervention is breed selection, not cooling hardware.
Key Challenge for Harare Farmers
High competition and frequent power outages require generators for brooding.
FarmIQ sends heat mortality spike alerts same-day. Catch it before you lose the cycle.
Get Started Free