Piles of dead chickens were discovered outside of a major agribusiness shortly after a heatwave in the UK on July 25.
Local media photographed piles of dead chickens outside the Moy Park poultry farm in Newton-on-Trent, northern England.
When asked why the chickens were dead, farm workers blamed the recent hot weather for killing the livestock.
“We tried to do everything but there was nothing more we could do. The freak weather has done this to them, please don’t turn this into anything bad,” the unnamed staff member said, according to The Lincolnite.
The workers claimed they made every reasonable effort to look after the chickens, including “carting the animals out of the farm.”
“Animal activists don’t think that we care about them but we really do,” the staff member said, according to the outlet.
The farm is understood to be a major supplier of chicken meat to Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Co-op supermarkets, and online grocer Ocado.
However, several concerned citizens are not convinced and have complained directly to the farm via its Facebook page.
Another person expressed her dissatisfaction with the farm’s handling of its livestock.
Someone else described the farm workers’ lack of care for animals as “absolutely disgusting.”
However, a spokesperson from Moy Park maintained it “implemented procedures to help protect” the hens against extreme heat.
“The recent high temperatures have been very challenging for many in the farming and poultry industries,” the spokesperson said, according to The Lincolnite.