The Most Versatile Organ in a Chicken

April 7, 2022
by Ericka

Chickens are fascinating. Intellectual, sassy little sprites with tons of personality. And anatomical wonders. A lot of this information probably applies to most birds (except ostriches, apparently) but I don’t care about those birds. We’re talking chickens. We’ve talked about how cool chicken vision is before. Today, we’ll talk about the other end. It’s kinda…

Chickens are fascinating. Intellectual, sassy little sprites with tons of personality. And anatomical wonders.

A lot of this information probably applies to most birds (except ostriches, apparently) but I don’t care about those birds. We’re talking chickens.

We’ve talked about how cool chicken vision is before. Today, we’ll talk about the other end. It’s kinda cool, too.

Chickens don’t have a sphincter (you know the one, it controls when you have to go) like mammals do. Instead, bird excrement passes through the cloaca, which doesn’t afford quite the same control.

A cloaca is a multi-purpose chamber. It’s connected to digestive, excretory, and reproductive tracts. Each internal opening is covered by muscle and skin. The external opening is called the vent.

Fun fact number two, birds don’t pee. They don’t have a bladder. Instead, they convert nitrogen to uric acid crystals. Those crystals are deposited into the cloaca and eliminated along with the excrement. It appears as the white layer among mostly brown poo. Most notable on your windshield (thanks, robins).

When chickens mate they perform something called the “cloacal kiss”. Sperm from the male cloaca travels into the female cloaca and go on to fertilize the egg. The egg is then laid through the cloaca, incubated for a few weeks, and hatched into a cute little peep-peep. See right.

So there you have it. The most versatile organ in a chicken.

 

Subscribe to our blog!

[grid-1-3]

[email-subscribers namefield=”YES” desc=”” group=”Public”]

[/grid-1-3]

Similar Posts

VieW All Posts

2023 A Year in Review

2023 A Year in Review   2023 was a year for growth and new developments. We saw record attendance return to the industries biggest tradeshows. We released a slew of innovative new products, and we lost one of the industries most notable inventors, Fred Steudler. While IPPE's attendance might have waned a bit, the rebranding…

Biosecurity Practices that Everyone Should Follow

  Biosecurity Practices That Everyone Should Follow Control of human traffic: Restrict visitors to essential personnel only. Ideally, from a biosecurity standpoint, there would be no visitors at all. All people moving onto and within the site should be approved and records kept,  including all contractors, service people, maintenance personnel, site visitors, friends, and neighbors.…

Observe Don’t Disturb

  Subscribe to our blog! [grid-1-3] [email-subscribers namefield="YES" desc="" group="Public"] [/grid-1-3]