It is uric acid. It is some what similar in composition to the urea in human urine.
Uric acid. As chickens do not urinate they process the urine through the same exit as their feces. The gray/white stuff is the result. This way they do not lose water by passing urine.
The same as any other chicken breed. They have a cloaca (vent) which is a duel purpose orafice to expel both eggs and feces. Chickens do not urinate, they excrete uric acid along with the feces...which is why chicken feces is both brown and white.
The white stuff in chicken feces is called URIC ACID. Mammals like us produce waste ammonia but it is combined with carbon dioxide (CO2) and converted into urea. Humans dissolve urea in water making urine (pee). Chickens do the process differently. They use less water and do not pee ,so they convert the ammonia into Uric acid and excrete it as a white paste or powder.
chicken pox..
Chicken feces contains a high concentration of uric acid (the white part) This is high in nitrogen and a basic need in all gardens.
feces. In their feces is fish bones and stuff.
NO The uric acid produced by a chicken is expelled through the same process as feces. That white part of chicken feces is actually uric acid. Chicken do not urinate, they process water differently than other animals using it much more efficiently.
The brown stuff is their feces.
If you stuff everything in your mouth at once
The cloaca in the chicken is where they excrete feces, lay eggs, and conceive.
Generally, cat feces is brown, just like with humans and other mammals. Regardless of the species, fecal matter does vary in hue from time to time. If it is consistently black in color or there is any evidence of bleeding, you should take the cat to the vet.
The white juice or "goop" that comes out of chicken breasts when you cook it is protein from the meat. When chicken breasts are dissolved in water either from the meat or added during processing, protein leaks out and forms a white gel. This is common when cooking chicken breasts.