Some causes of EARLY CHICK MORTALITY

Very sorry you have run into such troubles. I don't know what would be a likely cause. I really hope things smooth out.
hugs.gif


I think it was a good idea to remove the wood chips, though. Since those are from fresh wood, they would be prone to mold more than dried wood shavings. We put a bunch of huge piles of "power-company-generated" woodchips in our pasture & had problems with our horses eating them & developing chronic cough. Didn't expect that. Had to spread the piles, plus put in slow hay feeders to give the horses something else to nibble on for more of the day.

On further thought, I believe fumes from some types of freshly cut wood aren't very good for chickens so maybe that or mold could have contributed to chick problems??
 
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I just got my chicks. They have a heat lamp and a heater outside the brooder because it's pretty cold still in my basement. Some of them are fine and venturing around, yet some are huddled tigh under the lamp. Are they cold from the long trip from the hatchery or do I need to make it hotter?
 
UPDATE- So I talked to my vet (he keeps chickens as well) and he suggested antibiotics added to water, however I also talked to a woman who used to own a local hatchery and she thought it was the weather and new unproven mothers. She was right. Since the weather warmed, haven't lost a single chick- everyone's been very healthy and thriving. I did take one singleton chick away from its mother and brooded her indoors with some mail ordered chicks that came in at the same time, but every other broody that I have outside who hatched chicks is doing exceptionally well. Thank goodness.
 
I have 14 chicks in a large tub presently, they are going on 3 weeks old, thinking of putting little girls in hen house, but I am concerned about 50-60 degree temps at night, (live in Louisiana 75 degrees during day) I lost all my hens to a fox, or some other predator, will there be any chance of disease spreading from adult hens to baby chicks.
I can close off all openings, so chicks will be safe, just concerned about temps and danger of disease.
All my hens were healthy...before they were killed by predator.

Thanks, appreciate any info on this matter
Anthony
 
I am starting a small group of hens.. I really want four hens, but everyone I know advises me we should get at least two extras so that we end up with the desired four. I ordered six chicks, so I assume I am guaranteeing I will have all six live to maturity! Lol!
 
Causes of Early Chick Mortality
from the World Veterinary Association
http://www.worldvet.org/displayarticle1207.html
Causes of Early Chick Mortality
Posted by: agrilive on Oct 15, 2003 - 03:58 PM​
technical​
by​
Prof.Dr. Ahsan-ul-Haq​
CHAIRAMAN DEPARTMENT OF POULTRY HUSBANDRY UNIVESITY OF AGRICULTURE FAISALABAD PAKISTAN-38000​
Tanveer Ahmad​
There are many causes of early chick mortality, some important causes are as under;​
1. Genetic causes.​
2. Managemental causes.​
3. Nutritional causes.​
4. Disease causes.​
1. GENETIC CAUSE OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
Genetic cause is also important because there are 21 lethal mutations in the fowl. The lethal is more pronounced in homozygotes especially during 3rd week of incubation. The greater the abnormality caused by the lethal gene, the earlier the age at death. Most creepers die at 3rd or 4th day of incubation and most talpid embryos at 8th to 10th day.​
Sticky embryos die during the last 4 days of incubation and about half of the Naked chicks die during 2 or 3 days before hatching time, congenital loco is lethal within a week after hatching and congenital tremor kills 90% of the affected chicks within a month. If the eggs from a control and a carrier flock are incubated under the same conditions, the maximum possible difference of hatching will be about 25%.​
2. MANAGEMENTAL CAUSES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
A) Effect of high brooding temperature​
High brooding temperature causes the following problems,​
Dehydration:​
The body of young chicks comprises of about 70 % water, when temperature remains continuously high, it causes loss of water from the body, when this water loss reaches about 10% the chick die due to dehydration. Pasting:​
This is another problem of high brooding temperature in which feces become stacked around the vent area causing blockage of the vent which ultimately results in death.​
B) Effect of low brooding temperature​
Low brooding temperature causes the following problems,​
Chilling or brooding pneumonia:​
Temperature below normal causes pneumonia problem in young chicks, in which the colour of lungs become blue.​
Smothering:​
During low temperature chicks huddle together to maintain body temperature which results in smothering and death.​
Prevention of temperature problems.​
To prevent the problems of dehydration, pasting, chilling and smothering we should adjust the brooding room temperature 24 hours before putting the chicks in the brooding room and during the brooding period. Try to maintain the normal temperature throughout the brooding period and brooding areas.​
C) Effect of poisoning​
Mortality due to poisoning is also high in young chicks such as;​
Feed poisoning:​
Fungal contaminated feed and toxic material in feed causes feed poisoning .​
Salt poisoning:​
Salt poisoning also causes mortality which is due to excess salt in drinking water and feed.​
Gas poisoning:​
High concentration of different toxic gases also causes mortality which are;​
Ammonia:​
It causes irritation of mucous membrane & eyes, low feed consumption, reduced growth rate, loss of cilia in the trachea , hemorrhages and death at level above 100 ppm, so its concentration should be less than 25 ppm.​
Carbon monoxide (CO):​
CO combines with hemoglobin to form carboxy-hemoglobin which is unable to transport oxygen. The lethal conc. of CO is 2000-3600 ppm .​
Carbon dioxide:​
If the conc. of CO2 goes beyond 30% ,it causes suffocation and death.​
Tennin or Litter poisoning:​
The ingestion of toxic material like tannin in saw dust causes mortality.​
D) Effect of injuries​
If chicks are not handled carefully during various operations it causes injuries and death which are; sexing, vaccination, dubbing, debeaking.​
E) Starvation​
Young chicks do not have fat storage to fulfill body needs during starvation, so it results in death .​
F) Less floor, feeder and waterer spaces​
Less floor space is another cause of mortality in chicks as over crowding causes dampness of the litter material which become a suitable site for the multiplication of micro organism, causing, coccidiosis etc. Less feeder and waterer space causes starvation and death specially in young chicks.​
G) High relative humidity​
High relative humidity in brooding house causes the dampness of litter material which facilitate the growth of micro organisms causing infections.​
H) Predators​
If brooding houses are not properly constructed against predators they also causes mortality, e.g. Rat, Dog, Cat etc.​
3. NUTRITIONAL CAUSES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY a) Water​
Water play an important role in maintaining the health and performance of the birds. It acts as a transport medium for nutrients and metabolic end products. It helps in maintaining deep body temperature during hot weather.​
Water play an important role in weight gain of broiler.​
Water fulfill the minor deficiency of mineral like Na, Cl, K etc.​
Imbalance and unhygienic water causes high mortality.​
b) Effect of fat soluble vitamins deficiency​
Severe deficiency of these vitamins (A, D, E & K) causes death, but minor deficiency causes cessation of growth, ruffled feather, lacrimation, rickets, encephalomalacia, exudative diathesis and anemia etc.​
c) Effect of water soluble vitamins deficiency​
Severe deficiency of these vitamins (B-Complex & C) causes death, but minor deficiency causes, loss of weight, poor feathering, poor growth, dermatitis, perosis, nervous signs and anemia etc.​
4. DISEASES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
If biosecurity measures are not maintained then there is a great chance of disease out-break, because the young chick lack immunity .​
a) Omphalitis​
This bacterial disease affects the chicks during and after hatching, spreads navel infection characterized by inflamed skin in the navel area, soft, flabby and distended abdomen, vent pasting, foul smelling on carcass opening, due to unabsorbed yolk.​
b) Pullorum​
It is an acute infectious and fatal bacterial disease of chicks characterized by ruffled feather, white diarrhea, labor breathing, chirping and death.​
c) Salmonellosis​
A group of acute rapidly spreading diseases affecting all ages characterized by rise in body temperature, septicemia, omphalitis, hepatitis, enlargement of spleen, arthritis and death.​
d) Colibacillosis​
It is an acute septicemia disease caused by E-coli affecting all ages characterized by involvement of all systems, poor feed conversion and death.​
DR KHALID SHOUQ​
_______________________________________________________​
From Blackwell Publishing:​
SOME HATCHERY FACTORS INVOLVED IN EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
* D.J. Kingston11Inghams Enterprises, P.O. Box 4, Liverpool, New South Wales 2171​
*​
1Inghams Enterprises, P.O. Box 4, Liverpool, New South Wales 2171​
Abstract​
:​
Observations made in a commercial broiler hatchery revealed that chicks hatched over a period of 48 hours. Chick mortality to 10 days of age was 3.2% for those hatched at the commencement of the hatch, 1.2% for those hatched at peak of hatch and 52.9% for those hatched at the end of hatching. Chicks hatched early were more prone to dehydration while late hatching chicks had a higher incidence of leg weakness.​
Chicks held for 48 hours in hatcher machines lost 12.5% to 21.7% of their hatching weight and 79.4% of the hatching weight of the yolk sac.​
Normal 10-day mortality from this hatchery in winter months was observed to be 2.4% but was reduced to 1.2% when staggered setting times of donor flocks was employed by removing chicks from the machines 3 hours after 100% hatch, but was increased to 5.6% by holding chicks in the hatchery in chick boxes for 24 hours at 70±C.​
________________________________________________________​
From Pfizer Animal Management:​
Early Chick Mortality
Causes​
Early mortality of chicks and turkey poults is caused mainly by Escherichia coli and staphylococcal infections, primarily Staphylococcus aureus. Large numbers of E. coli are present in the general poultry house environment through fecal contamination. Initial exposure to pathogenic E. coli may occur in the hatchery from infected or contaminated eggs, but systemic infection usually requires predisposing environmental or infectious causes.​
Symptoms and Diagnosis​
Signs are non-specific. Young birds dying of acute septicemia (infections in the blood) have few lesions, except for an enlarged liver and spleen. There are often increased fluids in the body cavities. Birds that survive septicemia develop subacute fibrinopurulent airsacculitis, pericarditis, perihepatitis and lymphocytic depletion of the bursa and thymus. Unusually pathogenic salmonellae produce similar lesions in chicks. Although airsacculitis is a classic lesion of colibacillosis, it is unclear if it results from primary respiratory exposure or from extension of serositis.​
Isolation of a pure culture of E. coli from heart, blood, liver or typical visceral lesions in a fresh carcass indicates primary or secondary colibacillosis.​
Management​
Control predisposing infections, sanitation and other environmental factors that spread disease. Use antibiotics in day-old chicks as indicated by susceptibility tests. Commercial bacterins, administered to breeder hens or chicks, have provided some protection.​
They recommend treatment with one of their medication.​
_________________________________________________________________​
Mortality: Common Causes
Summer 2002 by Jeff Mattocks​
Air Quality​
I receive many calls per year about mild to severe respiratory problems. I start my diagnosis by asking a lot of questions regarding the symptoms and conditions of the poultry. Most of the cases that I try to diagnose throughout the year are related to air quality, and most of these occur in the brooder.​
Many folk, particularly beginners in pastured poultry, treat their chicks like their infant children. Everyone is cautious about drafts and chills and these are things to be aware of. The downfall to being overcautious is the tendency to seal up the entire brooder so that NO fresh air can get in. Chicks require a minimum 100% air exchange 6 times in a 24 hour period. This doesn't include drafts that come in at floor level. It also does not include chilling the chicks with a rush of very cool air. It does include a subtle continuous movement of air in the brooder or any controlled environment.​
The problem most often encountered with poor air movement is Sinusitis. Sinusitis is a direct result of excess humidity and ammonia release from manure. The ammonia will cause an irritated respiratory tract, which causes tissue scarring, which decreases oxygen absorption to the blood stream, which accentuates Ascites. (My grammar is really not that bad. I wanted you to see the domino affect of a bad condition.) Both sinusitis and ammonia scarring will retard growth weights, if they don't kill the birds first.​
Both sinusitis and ammonia build up can be controlled with air quality management.​
Temperature Control​
We all know that temperature control is critical. I experienced this first hand this spring when brooding chicks in February when our day time and night time temperatures swing at least 20 degrees. I know that I don't deal well with 20 degree temperature swings, how well do we think a day old chick can deal with these types of temperature changes? I had to adjust my heat lamp distance a minimum of 4 times daily to try and maintain some sort of constant temperature.​
Chicks need to regulate their own temperature. By this I mean that we provide enough area with supplied heat that the chick can find it when it needs it and get away from it when they don't. Amazingly the chicks are really smarter than I give them credit for. I only thought they were stupid because they didn't do what I thought they should.​
I get a couple calls each year where the chicks are very irritable and even cannibalistic. Asking my twenty questions, I find the problem is almost always excessive heat.​
Coccidiosis and Necrotic Enteritis​
Coccidiosis and Necrotic Enteritis are often confused, as the symptoms are similar. The symptoms include pasty butts, diarrhea, lifelessness, excess water consumption, and eating shavings. The difference will be blood spots in the manure. Blood spots are a clear indication of Coccidiosis. The good news is that both problems can be treated the same way. MANAGE YOUR LITTER! That was simple. Whenever you see clumped litter (generally around the feeder or waterers) you have harmful bacteria and/or coccidiosis. Actually there are several precautionary steps that can be taken. First, keep the clumped litter removed. Second, raise the feeders and waterers so that the lip of the feeder and waterers are level with the average birds back. Third, periodically apply thin layers of new shavings on top of the old. Fourth, maintain a good AIR FLOW.​
Most occurrences of Coccidiosis and Enteritis will occur in the brooder. Generally symptoms will become noticeable around day 10. The mortality will peak between day 14 - day 21. Then the deaths will slowly reduce because the remaining chicks have built their own immunity to coccidiosis. If either of these problems have gotten out of hand and you are in the middle of a crisis, feed whole / raw milk to the chicks for 7 days. This will coat the stomach and soothe the pain so they can continue to eat and drink normally while the immune system kicks in and protects the chick. This is the easiest method.​
Wonderful info. This helped me greatly today!
 
Causes of Early Chick Mortality
from the World Veterinary Association
http://www.worldvet.org/displayarticle1207.html
Causes of Early Chick Mortality
Posted by: agrilive on Oct 15, 2003 - 03:58 PM​
technical​
by​
Prof.Dr. Ahsan-ul-Haq​
CHAIRAMAN DEPARTMENT OF POULTRY HUSBANDRY UNIVESITY OF AGRICULTURE FAISALABAD PAKISTAN-38000​
Tanveer Ahmad​
There are many causes of early chick mortality, some important causes are as under;​
1. Genetic causes.​
2. Managemental causes.​
3. Nutritional causes.​
4. Disease causes.​
1. GENETIC CAUSE OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
Genetic cause is also important because there are 21 lethal mutations in the fowl. The lethal is more pronounced in homozygotes especially during 3rd week of incubation. The greater the abnormality caused by the lethal gene, the earlier the age at death. Most creepers die at 3rd or 4th day of incubation and most talpid embryos at 8th to 10th day.​
Sticky embryos die during the last 4 days of incubation and about half of the Naked chicks die during 2 or 3 days before hatching time, congenital loco is lethal within a week after hatching and congenital tremor kills 90% of the affected chicks within a month. If the eggs from a control and a carrier flock are incubated under the same conditions, the maximum possible difference of hatching will be about 25%.​
2. MANAGEMENTAL CAUSES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
A) Effect of high brooding temperature​
High brooding temperature causes the following problems,​
Dehydration:​
The body of young chicks comprises of about 70 % water, when temperature remains continuously high, it causes loss of water from the body, when this water loss reaches about 10% the chick die due to dehydration. Pasting:​
This is another problem of high brooding temperature in which feces become stacked around the vent area causing blockage of the vent which ultimately results in death.​
B) Effect of low brooding temperature​
Low brooding temperature causes the following problems,​
Chilling or brooding pneumonia:​
Temperature below normal causes pneumonia problem in young chicks, in which the colour of lungs become blue.​
Smothering:​
During low temperature chicks huddle together to maintain body temperature which results in smothering and death.​
Prevention of temperature problems.​
To prevent the problems of dehydration, pasting, chilling and smothering we should adjust the brooding room temperature 24 hours before putting the chicks in the brooding room and during the brooding period. Try to maintain the normal temperature throughout the brooding period and brooding areas.​
C) Effect of poisoning​
Mortality due to poisoning is also high in young chicks such as;​
Feed poisoning:​
Fungal contaminated feed and toxic material in feed causes feed poisoning .​
Salt poisoning:​
Salt poisoning also causes mortality which is due to excess salt in drinking water and feed.​
Gas poisoning:​
High concentration of different toxic gases also causes mortality which are;​
Ammonia:​
It causes irritation of mucous membrane & eyes, low feed consumption, reduced growth rate, loss of cilia in the trachea , hemorrhages and death at level above 100 ppm, so its concentration should be less than 25 ppm.​
Carbon monoxide (CO):​
CO combines with hemoglobin to form carboxy-hemoglobin which is unable to transport oxygen. The lethal conc. of CO is 2000-3600 ppm .​
Carbon dioxide:​
If the conc. of CO2 goes beyond 30% ,it causes suffocation and death.​
Tennin or Litter poisoning:​
The ingestion of toxic material like tannin in saw dust causes mortality.​
D) Effect of injuries​
If chicks are not handled carefully during various operations it causes injuries and death which are; sexing, vaccination, dubbing, debeaking.​
E) Starvation​
Young chicks do not have fat storage to fulfill body needs during starvation, so it results in death .​
F) Less floor, feeder and waterer spaces​
Less floor space is another cause of mortality in chicks as over crowding causes dampness of the litter material which become a suitable site for the multiplication of micro organism, causing, coccidiosis etc. Less feeder and waterer space causes starvation and death specially in young chicks.​
G) High relative humidity​
High relative humidity in brooding house causes the dampness of litter material which facilitate the growth of micro organisms causing infections.​
H) Predators​
If brooding houses are not properly constructed against predators they also causes mortality, e.g. Rat, Dog, Cat etc.​
3. NUTRITIONAL CAUSES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY a) Water​
Water play an important role in maintaining the health and performance of the birds. It acts as a transport medium for nutrients and metabolic end products. It helps in maintaining deep body temperature during hot weather.​
Water play an important role in weight gain of broiler.​
Water fulfill the minor deficiency of mineral like Na, Cl, K etc.​
Imbalance and unhygienic water causes high mortality.​
b) Effect of fat soluble vitamins deficiency​
Severe deficiency of these vitamins (A, D, E & K) causes death, but minor deficiency causes cessation of growth, ruffled feather, lacrimation, rickets, encephalomalacia, exudative diathesis and anemia etc.​
c) Effect of water soluble vitamins deficiency​
Severe deficiency of these vitamins (B-Complex & C) causes death, but minor deficiency causes, loss of weight, poor feathering, poor growth, dermatitis, perosis, nervous signs and anemia etc.​
4. DISEASES OF EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
If biosecurity measures are not maintained then there is a great chance of disease out-break, because the young chick lack immunity .​
a) Omphalitis​
This bacterial disease affects the chicks during and after hatching, spreads navel infection characterized by inflamed skin in the navel area, soft, flabby and distended abdomen, vent pasting, foul smelling on carcass opening, due to unabsorbed yolk.​
b) Pullorum​
It is an acute infectious and fatal bacterial disease of chicks characterized by ruffled feather, white diarrhea, labor breathing, chirping and death.​
c) Salmonellosis​
A group of acute rapidly spreading diseases affecting all ages characterized by rise in body temperature, septicemia, omphalitis, hepatitis, enlargement of spleen, arthritis and death.​
d) Colibacillosis​
It is an acute septicemia disease caused by E-coli affecting all ages characterized by involvement of all systems, poor feed conversion and death.​
DR KHALID SHOUQ​
_______________________________________________________​
From Blackwell Publishing:​
SOME HATCHERY FACTORS INVOLVED IN EARLY CHICK MORTALITY​
* D.J. Kingston11Inghams Enterprises, P.O. Box 4, Liverpool, New South Wales 2171​
*​
1Inghams Enterprises, P.O. Box 4, Liverpool, New South Wales 2171​
Abstract​
:​
Observations made in a commercial broiler hatchery revealed that chicks hatched over a period of 48 hours. Chick mortality to 10 days of age was 3.2% for those hatched at the commencement of the hatch, 1.2% for those hatched at peak of hatch and 52.9% for those hatched at the end of hatching. Chicks hatched early were more prone to dehydration while late hatching chicks had a higher incidence of leg weakness.​
Chicks held for 48 hours in hatcher machines lost 12.5% to 21.7% of their hatching weight and 79.4% of the hatching weight of the yolk sac.​
Normal 10-day mortality from this hatchery in winter months was observed to be 2.4% but was reduced to 1.2% when staggered setting times of donor flocks was employed by removing chicks from the machines 3 hours after 100% hatch, but was increased to 5.6% by holding chicks in the hatchery in chick boxes for 24 hours at 70±C.​
________________________________________________________​
From Pfizer Animal Management:​
Early Chick Mortality
Causes​
Early mortality of chicks and turkey poults is caused mainly by Escherichia coli and staphylococcal infections, primarily Staphylococcus aureus. Large numbers of E. coli are present in the general poultry house environment through fecal contamination. Initial exposure to pathogenic E. coli may occur in the hatchery from infected or contaminated eggs, but systemic infection usually requires predisposing environmental or infectious causes.​
Symptoms and Diagnosis​
Signs are non-specific. Young birds dying of acute septicemia (infections in the blood) have few lesions, except for an enlarged liver and spleen. There are often increased fluids in the body cavities. Birds that survive septicemia develop subacute fibrinopurulent airsacculitis, pericarditis, perihepatitis and lymphocytic depletion of the bursa and thymus. Unusually pathogenic salmonellae produce similar lesions in chicks. Although airsacculitis is a classic lesion of colibacillosis, it is unclear if it results from primary respiratory exposure or from extension of serositis.​
Isolation of a pure culture of E. coli from heart, blood, liver or typical visceral lesions in a fresh carcass indicates primary or secondary colibacillosis.​
Management​
Control predisposing infections, sanitation and other environmental factors that spread disease. Use antibiotics in day-old chicks as indicated by susceptibility tests. Commercial bacterins, administered to breeder hens or chicks, have provided some protection.​
They recommend treatment with one of their medication.​
_________________________________________________________________​
Mortality: Common Causes
Summer 2002 by Jeff Mattocks​
Air Quality​
I receive many calls per year about mild to severe respiratory problems. I start my diagnosis by asking a lot of questions regarding the symptoms and conditions of the poultry. Most of the cases that I try to diagnose throughout the year are related to air quality, and most of these occur in the brooder.​
Many folk, particularly beginners in pastured poultry, treat their chicks like their infant children. Everyone is cautious about drafts and chills and these are things to be aware of. The downfall to being overcautious is the tendency to seal up the entire brooder so that NO fresh air can get in. Chicks require a minimum 100% air exchange 6 times in a 24 hour period. This doesn't include drafts that come in at floor level. It also does not include chilling the chicks with a rush of very cool air. It does include a subtle continuous movement of air in the brooder or any controlled environment.​
The problem most often encountered with poor air movement is Sinusitis. Sinusitis is a direct result of excess humidity and ammonia release from manure. The ammonia will cause an irritated respiratory tract, which causes tissue scarring, which decreases oxygen absorption to the blood stream, which accentuates Ascites. (My grammar is really not that bad. I wanted you to see the domino affect of a bad condition.) Both sinusitis and ammonia scarring will retard growth weights, if they don't kill the birds first.​
Both sinusitis and ammonia build up can be controlled with air quality management.​
Temperature Control​
We all know that temperature control is critical. I experienced this first hand this spring when brooding chicks in February when our day time and night time temperatures swing at least 20 degrees. I know that I don't deal well with 20 degree temperature swings, how well do we think a day old chick can deal with these types of temperature changes? I had to adjust my heat lamp distance a minimum of 4 times daily to try and maintain some sort of constant temperature.​
Chicks need to regulate their own temperature. By this I mean that we provide enough area with supplied heat that the chick can find it when it needs it and get away from it when they don't. Amazingly the chicks are really smarter than I give them credit for. I only thought they were stupid because they didn't do what I thought they should.​
I get a couple calls each year where the chicks are very irritable and even cannibalistic. Asking my twenty questions, I find the problem is almost always excessive heat.​
Coccidiosis and Necrotic Enteritis​
Coccidiosis and Necrotic Enteritis are often confused, as the symptoms are similar. The symptoms include pasty butts, diarrhea, lifelessness, excess water consumption, and eating shavings. The difference will be blood spots in the manure. Blood spots are a clear indication of Coccidiosis. The good news is that both problems can be treated the same way. MANAGE YOUR LITTER! That was simple. Whenever you see clumped litter (generally around the feeder or waterers) you have harmful bacteria and/or coccidiosis. Actually there are several precautionary steps that can be taken. First, keep the clumped litter removed. Second, raise the feeders and waterers so that the lip of the feeder and waterers are level with the average birds back. Third, periodically apply thin layers of new shavings on top of the old. Fourth, maintain a good AIR FLOW.​
Most occurrences of Coccidiosis and Enteritis will occur in the brooder. Generally symptoms will become noticeable around day 10. The mortality will peak between day 14 - day 21. Then the deaths will slowly reduce because the remaining chicks have built their own immunity to coccidiosis. If either of these problems have gotten out of hand and you are in the middle of a crisis, feed whole / raw milk to the chicks for 7 days. This will coat the stomach and soothe the pain so they can continue to eat and drink normally while the immune system kicks in and protects the chick. This is the easiest method.​
Wait, what will happen if the humidity is too low during incubation? I know shrink wrapping, but does it change anything else?
 

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