I will never forget the day an experienced poultry farmer walked into my broiler house. He spent less than a minute inside, stepped out, and said calmly: “He said, your birds are not losing weight because of feed. It’s the heat.”
At first, I laughed. The house looked normal. The thermometer didn’t scream danger. But he leaned in and said something that changed how I farm forever: “A broiler reacts to one degree the way a human reacts to ten.” That one sentence opened my eyes to a reality most broiler farmers never hear. Just one degree Celsius above the ideal temperature can slow growth by up to five grams per bird per day.
Five grams may sound small, but over time, over large flocks, the losses are enormous:
Five grams per day × seven days = 35 grams lost Five grams per day × thirty days = over 150 grams lost Across a thousand birds, that is 150 kilograms of lost meat — and lost profit. It is not disease, poor feed, or bad genetics. Heat quietly erodes your earnings without you noticing.
HOW HEAT SILENTLY DESTROYS BROILER PERFORMANCE
When birds get too warm, they pant. Panting may look harmless, but it is a sign your flock is burning energy just to survive.
Panting does three things that crush growth: Burns energy that should go into muscle and weight gain Reduces feed intake, slowing growth Lowers feed conversion efficiency, making every kilogram of feed less effective A hot broiler drinks more, eats less, and becomes lethargic. Weight gain slows, immunity weakens, uniformity disappears, and even with the best feed, performance collapses.
VENTILATION IS YOUR BEST WEAPON
A poorly ventilated house traps heat like a sealed oven. Warm, stagnant air rises and stays inside. Moisture and ammonia accumulate, stress levels spike, and disease pressure increases. You can vaccinate perfectly every week, but without airflow, birds cannot grow. Controlling the environment is as important as controlling feed quality. Fresh air is not optional — it is life for your flock.

COMMON ENVIRONMENTAL MISTAKES THAT CAUSE HEAT STRESS
Even small oversights can destroy profits:
Houses facing the wrong direction absorb excessive sun
Iron sheet roofing without insulation traps heat inside
Poor shading turns brooding areas into heat chambers
Crowding multiple houses together blocks natural air flow
Hot drinking water makes birds avoid drinkers, worsening dehydration
Managing heat isn’t only about comfort. It is about survival, growth, and profitability. Flushing drinker lines during peak heat hours and providing shade and proper airflow can make the difference between thriving birds and weak, underperforming stock.

THE HARSH TRUTH
Most farmers lose more money to heat stress than disease. Disease kills birds. Heat kills profit long before the first bird falls ill.
Control the environment, and you control:
Growth rates
Feed conversion efficiency
Flock uniformity
Slaughter weights
Overall farm profit
Temperature management is not a small detail. It is the foundation of broiler success. Ignore it, and no amount of feed, medication, or effort can save your profit.
