Robotic arms of the Respeggt Circuit in-ovo sexing machine take samples to determine the embryos’ sex. Photo: Respeggt GmbH
The adoption of in-ovo sexing is growing in countries within the EU, with expectations by some analysts that in countries that have bans on chick culling close to 100% adoption or even full adoption will be reached within a few years. “For countries like Norway and the US, where adoption is market-driven and there are no chick cull bans, the rollout is still early, but we anticipate fast growth,” notes Robert Yaman, CEO of Innovate Animal Ag, a US-based think tank with a core mission to i
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