How do chickens eat without teeth and why don’t they have teeth? The answers relates to their unfortunate status as prey animals. Being near the bottom of the food chain, chickens developed a dine-and-dash system of eating to avoid being eaten themselves by predators. The result is a unique digestive process that allows them to eat quickly, digest quickly, and fly away to safety.

Illustration by Bethany A. Caskey

I’LL TAKE THAT TO-GO!

When a chicken picks up food with its beak, the tongue pushes it to the back of the mouth into its esophagus, which acts like a water slide from the mouth to the crop. A chicken’s crop serves as a temporary food storage pouch; it’s located slightly to the side of its right breast muscle.

 

In a conversation with poultry nutritionist, Dr. Biggs, he explained that once in the crop, food mixes with small amounts of beneficial bacteria and lactic acid before moving on to the proventriculus, which is considered the “true stomach.” While in the proventriculus, acids and pepsin (an enzyme) are added to the food mixture.

View the video of our chicken anatomy conversation at this link or click to play the video below.

 

The next stop…teeth! Not really, but a strong muscle known as the gizzard does the work of teeth for chickens by grinding down any remaining large food particles with the assistance of grit. Grit can be small stones, granite, oyster shells, or sand consumed by a chicken. Chickens that eat only crumbles or pellets do not need grit because the feed dissolves with water and digestive enzymes. Chickens that spend time outdoors naturally pick up grit in their travels if they need it (like when they find a leggy frog. Gah!)

Make sure to grab a grit chaser with that frog, Polly! #safetyfirst

Branching off the small intestine are two dead-end streets known as ceca whose job is to recycle water and ferment any food not previously broken down. This is the source of the super stinky poop deposited by chickens intermittently throughout the day. You know the stuff- it’s got the consistency of cafeteria pudding and stinks to High Heaven. Cecal poop can range in color from yellow to black.

The digestive tract ends at the cloaca where the contents from the intestines combine with solid waste from the chicken’s urinary tract known as urates. Chickens don’t have a bladder- the weight of a full bladder would pose problems for flying prey. Urates are visible on top of chicken poop as a white topper. Finally, chicken waste exits the bird through the cloaca- and so do eggs. #truestory

Fun facts: Abnormal droppings may signal illness, worms, or can be caused by something the chicken ate. Too much protein in the diet can cause diarrhea. The consumption of large amounts of water causes watery droppings, which is normal in hot weather, but not otherwise. Black-oil sunflower seeds can cause black poop, purple cabbage causes blue poop, etc. Learn more about normal and abnormal chicken poop here!

THE END.

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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How do chickens eat without teeth and why don’t they have teeth? The answers relates to their unfortunate status as prey animals. Being near the bottom of the food chain, chickens developed a dine-and-dash system of eating to avoid being eaten themselves by predators. The result is a unique digestive process that allows them to eat quickly, digest quickly, and fly away to safety.

Illustration by Bethany A. Caskey

I’LL TAKE THAT TO-GO!

When a chicken picks up food with its beak, the tongue pushes it to the back of the mouth into its esophagus, which acts like a water slide from the mouth to the crop. A chicken’s crop serves as a temporary food storage pouch; it’s located slightly to the side of its right breast muscle.

 

In a conversation with poultry nutritionist, Dr. Biggs, he explained that once in the crop, food mixes with small amounts of beneficial bacteria and lactic acid before moving on to the proventriculus, which is considered the “true stomach.” While in the proventriculus, acids and pepsin (an enzyme) are added to the food mixture.

View the video of our chicken anatomy conversation at this link or click to play the video below.

 

The next stop…teeth! Not really, but a strong muscle known as the gizzard does the work of teeth for chickens by grinding down any remaining large food particles with the assistance of grit. Grit can be small stones, granite, oyster shells, or sand consumed by a chicken. Chickens that eat only crumbles or pellets do not need grit because the feed dissolves with water and digestive enzymes. Chickens that spend time outdoors naturally pick up grit in their travels if they need it (like when they find a leggy frog. Gah!)

Make sure to grab a grit chaser with that frog, Polly! #safetyfirst

Branching off the small intestine are two dead-end streets known as ceca whose job is to recycle water and ferment any food not previously broken down. This is the source of the super stinky poop deposited by chickens intermittently throughout the day. You know the stuff- it’s got the consistency of cafeteria pudding and stinks to High Heaven. Cecal poop can range in color from yellow to black.

The digestive tract ends at the cloaca where the contents from the intestines combine with solid waste from the chicken’s urinary tract known as urates. Chickens don’t have a bladder- the weight of a full bladder would pose problems for flying prey. Urates are visible on top of chicken poop as a white topper. Finally, chicken waste exits the bird through the cloaca- and so do eggs. #truestory

Fun facts: Abnormal droppings may signal illness, worms, or can be caused by something the chicken ate. Too much protein in the diet can cause diarrhea. The consumption of large amounts of water causes watery droppings, which is normal in hot weather, but not otherwise. Black-oil sunflower seeds can cause black poop, purple cabbage causes blue poop, etc. Learn more about normal and abnormal chicken poop here!

THE END.

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Jennifer
Jennifer
2024 years ago

Can chickens OD on grit? I put a 10 lb bag of grit in my chicken run about 2 weeks ago and my 15 chickens ate it all in one night. I don’t always give them grit because 1) or local ranch store never has it in, 2) there is a ton of sand and some gravel in their run, and 3) they have supervised free range where they have access to more sand and gravel. I can feel gravel in a few of their crops. A few even cut down on their eating, I separated them and fed them… Read more »

Lori Kramer
Lori Kramer
2024 years ago

Would love to win! :)

Barbara Sherman
Barbara Sherman
2024 years ago

Would love to win this

Karen Smith-Scott
Karen Smith-Scott
2024 years ago

Well that was super interesting! Makes me worry less about my birds now that I understand it better, so thanks!

And here’s hoping I win that waterer!

Tessa
Tessa
2024 years ago

The video was so helpful!! I’m a new chicken mom, so sometimes I feel like I have no idea what is going on with them. Always good to learn more about their anatomy and how their bodies work. Thanks!

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