VETERINARY SCIENCES, cilt.13, sa.1, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
This study aimed to assess the impact of gradual versus abrupt light-dark transitions on the pectoral muscle, heart, tibia, and eye tissues of broilers, focusing on rearing disorders. A total of 270 male broiler chicks (ROSS-308) were divided into three groups according to the type of light transition: abrupt, 30-min gradual, and 1-h gradual changes in light intensity. The broilers were reared for six weeks, after which samples were collected for gross examination, morphometric and histomorphometric measurements, and histopathological analysis of the pectoral muscle, heart, tibia, and eye. White striping incidence in the pectoral muscle was not significantly affected by light-dark transition type. Results indicated that broilers in the 30-min gradual transition group had a higher relative heart weight than those in the abrupt-transition group (p < 0.05), although the RV/TV ratio did not differ. Tibial measurements, including weight, length, and cortical index, showed no differences across groups. Broilers exposed to a 1-h gradual transition between light and dark periods showed significantly greater eye weights compared to both the birds in the abrupt transition group and the birds in the 30-min transition group (p < 0.01). Overall, gradual light transitions did not substantially affect pectoral muscle or bone health but had minor effects on heart and eye weights in broilers reared under intensive production systems.