Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Near Fatality - Listless Chick
This Stafford mosaic chick with a dark crest is especially promising.
But the smaller chick on the right is listless!! Neither one open their mouths to beg me to feed them.
Note the red color apparent between its wings. It also felt cold and very lethargic. These chicks seem to be doing well the day before when I banded them.
Turning the chick over, an abnormal yellow/green color was seen especially toward the vent. I washed the abdomen and found that a thin yellow green film was covering the abdomen. Carefully, I peeled it off. This film can seal the vent and result in death.
When chicks are just banded, there is a danger of diarrhea which may be associated with too high protein diet or infection of either parasites or bacteria.
Looking around the cage, I saw pure hard boiled egg which normally I stop once chicks are banded. I also noted just a couple of hours earlier that the other hen sitting on eggs in the same cage, had gotten off the nest temporarily and feed the chicks, so three adult birds where overfeeding them.
E. coli smells and not smelling any odor. I decided to correct the diet and add KD powder to the water. I reduced the concentration of the egg food by adding an equal part of ABBA green 92, added more greens, oatmeal, and dish of straight ABBA green and took away the pure hard boiled egg.
Today the chicks are fine!! I will keep them on KD powder in the water and keep checking the vent and washing it, massaging it to assure it is indeed open. After washing the vent and making sure it is open, I encourage the chicks to walk in my hand, this movement encourages a full chick to expel its fecal material.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Linda
With a spring garden, we have fresh sage and mint plants. Can either of these herbs be fed 'fresh' as a green to canaries?
Have you ever fed any fresh herbs to your birds as a food or in a tea?
Just thinkin'.....Deb
I have not feed either sage or mint but will experiment with fresh green leaves today...
In the literature, sage and thyme are OK as well as some kinds of mint such as peppermint, spearmint, lemon balm and catnip but some mint are very toxic, namely pennyroyal mint.
Looking at the vent in picture 4, are those guide feathers and would you guess this is a male?
Post a Comment