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Induced molting (or forced molting) is the practice by the commercial egg industry of artificially provoking a complete flock of hen to molt simultaneously. During the molting period, the hens go out of production for a period of at least two weeks. This has the effect of allowing the hen's reproductive tracts to regress and rejuvenate. After a molt, the hen's production rate usually peaks slightly below the previous peak rate and egg quality is improved. The point of molting is thus to increase the production, egg quality, and profitability of flocks in their second or third laying seasons. Flocks that are slaughtered after a single laying season are not molted. Molting simulates the natural process where chickens grow a new set of feathers in the fall, a process generally accompanied by a sharp reduction or cessation of egg production. Natural molting is stimulated by shortening day lengths combined with stress (of any kind). Before confinement housing with artificial lights were the norm, the fall molt caused a fall scarcity of eggs and high market prices. Farmers attempted to pamper their flocks to prevent the molt as long as possible, to take advantage of the high prices. Modern controlled-environment confinement housing has the opposite problem; the hens are not normally presented with sufficient stress or cues to go into molt on their own. However, after laying continuously for nearly a year, their rate of egg production declines, as does the quality of the eggshell and the egg contents. In addition, the hens are seriously overweight.
   For a complete recovery of the reproductive tract the hen's body weight must drop 30 to 35 percent during the molt. This is achieved by withdrawing the hen's feed completely for as long as two weeks until they go into molt, which means they lose their feathers and cease to lay eggs in addition to losing weight. Some die during this period. North and Bell insist that the flock must be managed so that mortality doesn't exceed 1.25% over the 1-2 weeks of nearly complete feed withdrawal, compared to a 0.5% to 1.0% monthly mortality in a well-managed flock under low-stress conditions.
   Molting programs follow many variations. Some don't eliminate feed altogether. Some combine feed withdrawal with a short period of water withdrawal. Most programs also restrict the amount of lighting to provide a daylight period that's too short to stimulate egg production, providing a simulated autumn, the natural time of molt and minimum egg production.

Criticism

This temporary starving of the hens is seen as inhumane and is the main point of objection by critics and opponents of the practice. The alternative most often employed is to slaughter the hens instead of molting them.
   It is sometimes claimed that forced molting is an artifact of factory farming, but, like virtually all poultry practices, it predates the vertical integration of the poultry industry by decades. Jull prescribes a precise molting program in his 1938 book, "Poultry Husbandry,"

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