Mortality Management for Manicaland Broiler Farmers
In Manicaland, first-week mortality from brooding failures is the leading cause of above-average mortality. Power outages during the critical first 7 days cause chilling, suppressing immune development. Target brooding temperature at chick level: 32-33°C on day 1, reducing by 0.5°C per day. If you cannot maintain this without grid power, a generator or solar heating system is your most important investment before your next batch.
This page covers Mortality Management specifically for Manicaland conditions. For the complete Zimbabwe-wide guide:
Read the full Mortality Management guide for Zimbabwe →Industry Standards
Cobb 500 genetic potential: 1.5–2.5% total mortality per cycle under ideal conditions. Zimbabwe commercial average (well-managed): 3–4%. Zimbabwe smallholder average: 5–8%. Irvines Zimbabwe contract standard: must be below 5% to maintain contract status. Above 7% in any single week: immediate vet investigation required.
Week 1 Mortality (Days 1–7)
First-week mortality above 1.5% is abnormal and nearly always indicates: poor hatchery quality, chilling during transport, inadequate brooder temperature on arrival, or dehydration (birds not finding water within first 4 hours). The most common mistake Zimbabwean farmers make: not pre-warming the brooder house 24 hours before chick arrival. Target brooder temperature: 32–33°C at chick level on day 1.
Mid-Cycle Mortality (Days 14–28)
Mortality spike during days 14–28 is the most common serious event and is usually disease-related. Top causes in Zimbabwe: Gumboro (IBD), look for white/cream diarrhoea, birds sitting hunched, depletion of bursa. Newcastle Disease, respiratory signs, sudden deaths, green diarrhoea, nervous signs. Coccidiosis, blood in droppings (bloody or reddish litter), reduced feed intake at days 15–25. Immediately submit fresh dead birds to the nearest LITSAS or DVS laboratory for diagnosis. Do not guess. Treating the wrong disease wastes time and money.
Late Cycle Mortality (Days 30–42)
Late mortality is often sudden death syndrome (SDS) or ascites in fast-growing birds. SDS: healthy-looking birds found dead on their backs. Ascites: pot-bellied birds with fluid in the abdominal cavity. Both are metabolic conditions related to rapid growth, more common in Ross 308 than Cobb 500. Reduce late-cycle mortality by: adjusting lighting programs to slow growth in weeks 4–5, ensuring adequate vitamin E and selenium in finisher ration, maintaining good ventilation to prevent hypoxic stress.
FarmIQ Mortality Alerts
FarmIQ's rules engine calculates your 7-day rolling mortality average and alerts you when daily mortality spikes 2.5× above trend. This catches disease outbreaks on day 1, not day 3. The daily log takes 3 minutes and the alert it generates can save your cycle.
Key Challenge for Manicaland Farmers
High humidity elevates respiratory disease risk (IB, MG). Coccidiosis peaks in wet season. Feed transport costs from Harare/Mutare inflate input costs.
Log mortality once daily. FarmIQ does the analysis and alerts you before it becomes a crisis.
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