Scaly Leg Mites - Need Best / Easiest / Quickest Solution - Scaley

Pics
Would infectious gout still have the black scab? His pad is very large on that foot.
I'm using layer pellets, wheat, cracked corn, BOSS and some scratch grains in my fermented feed mix

Sure would. The feed mix doesn't sound too bad, maybe feeding too much? Is he a heavy bird? If he had it before and it has recurred, there has to be an underlying cause.
 
OH NO YOU DID'NT ASK ABOUT MITES DID YOU. Well let me tell you something....

MITES on fowl are sometimes mistaken for lice. Actually they are quite different.

Parasitic mites are so small that they are barely visible to the naked eve. All mites have four pairs of legs in their adult stage. Lice have three pairs of legs. Some of the mites are bloodsuckers. They may live for a long time without food. They and lice are controlled by different methods.

Two groups of mites attack poultry. One spends the greater part of its life cycle in crevices about the poultry houses, from which it makes nightly forages upon the roosting birds to suck their blood. The second group spends the entire life cycle on the birds; they burrow into the skin, into the shafts of the feathers, beneath the scales of the legs, and into the internal organs.

Of the several kinds of mites that may infest poultry anywhere in the United States, the commonest and perhaps the most injurious is the chicken mite (Dermanyssus gallinae). It is also known as the red chicken mite or the roost mite. The adult is not more than one thirty-second inch long when fully engorged with blood about the size of the head of a pin. Chicken mites are gray when unfed and reddish after having had a blood meal. When many of them infest a poultry house, they can be found by lifting a clod of manure off the roosts. Joints in the roosts are often surrounded by tiny, salt-and-pepper specks, which are the excrement of the hidden mites.

After taking a blood meal from the bird, the female chicken mite finds a crevice, usually on the roost, and deposits a few eggs. She then returns to the bird for additional meals. She may deposit 35 eggs in her lifetime. Larvae, which hatch from the eggs in 1 or 2 days, do not feed but shed their skins and then become nymphs. The nymphs attack the birds, suck blood, molt, suck blood a second time, molt again, and become adults. In warm weather or in heated buildings, the entire cycle may take only 1 week. Enormous infestations may build up in poultry houses in 3 or 4 weeks.

The northern fowl mite (Bdellonyssus sylviarum), also called the feather mite, is distributed widely over the United States, but is encountered less frequently than the chicken mite. It looks like the chicken mite but has a different life history.

Northern fowl mites normally spend their entire lives on chickens or other birds, but they are sometimes found in birds' nests and can breed on or off the birds. Their entire life cycle lasts 8 to 12 days. They can be found on the birds during the day. They move rapidly. If infested birds are picked up, the mites crawl over the handler's arms and sometimes on his clothing. They usually congregate about the bird's vent and give the feathers a soiled appearance. Their voracious bloodsucking habits may irritate the skin severely. Heavy infestations may develop in a short time.

Another mite that lives continuously on chickens and other birds is the scaly-leg mite (Knemidokoptes mutans). It attacks the unfeathered parts of the legs, burrows into the skin, and causes a condition like mange of livestock. It is generally found on older birds in the flock. It is less prevalent than the chicken mite and the northern fowl mite.

Scaly-leg mites usually are first noticed between the toes. As they multiply they work their way up the leg. They cause the scales to separate from the skin and the feet and legs to swell and become deformed. Occasionally they may spread to the comb and wattles. Scaly-leg mites are too small to be seen with the naked eye, but the symptoms they produce are detected easily.

The practice of culling old birds has eliminated the scaly-leg mite to a large degree, and it is now rarely seen except in small farm flocks.

Closely related to the scaly-leg mite is the depluming (or body-mange) mite of chickens and other birds (Knemidokoptes laevis var. gallinae). It also passes its entire life on the bird. It burrows into the skin at the base of the feathers. It is found only on the feathered areas of the body, usually over the back and sides. The mites cause intense irritation, so that the fowl may pluck out or break off their feathers. You can see this tiny mite only with a lens or microscope.

Most of the mites parasitic on chickens also can live on turkeys and other fowl, but they do not trouble turkeys quite so much as they do chickens. Apparently the management practices used for turkeys are not conducive to the propagation of mites. The most common mite affecting turkeys is the chicken mite. The northern fowl mite occasionally is troublesome. Both may be controlled with the same measures used against mites on chickens.

Severe infestations of mites do more damage than lice do. Mites that burrow into the skin produce intense skin irritation and heavy formation of scabs. Such injury retards the birds and spoils their appearance when dressed. Some species cause the loss of feathers, thereby interfering with the regulation of body heat. The nests of laying hens sometimes have so many chicken mites that the birds cannot remain in them.

Anemia, caused by the loss of blood, is common. Heavily parasitized fowl become thin, weak, and restless. Egg production falls. Young and laying birds may die. The injury due to mites that live in the internal organs has not been calculated, but may be sizable.

An indirect loss due to bloodsucking mites results from their ability to transmit disease, such as fowl cholera and Newcastle disease, among flocks.

For each of the four kinds of mites commonly found on chickens, a different method of attack is required. It is therefore essential to determine what species is present. If two or more species are present simultaneously, separate treatments will be necessary.

To CONTROL infestations of the chicken mite, an insecticide should be applied to the poultry house. It is not necessary to treat the birds.

The first step is to clean the building, nesting boxes, floor, and dropping pits thoroughly; burn the litter; and dispose of manure. Dried manure should be scraped from roosts and perches.

This cleaning should be followed by a liberal application of 0.5-percent Lindane or 2.5-percent DDT spray to the entire interior. Lindane or malathion applied to the roosts as a 1-percent paint is also satisfactory against the chicken mite. Lindane and malathion have a further advantage in that if the birds are returned to the buildings at the close of the day, all their lice will be destroyed.

With any of these insecticides, a second application may be required in 10 to 14 days, particularly in heavy infestations. It is not easy to eradicate chicken mites entirely.

Because the northern fowl mite remains on the birds most of the time, insecticidal dusts and dips applied directly to the birds are effective control measures.

Sulfur has been used for many years. The treatment of individual birds with powdered sulfur is satisfactory if liberal amounts of dust are used and if application is thorough. Dipping the birds in sulfur baths is laborious, but the results are gratifying. Dips may be prepared by mixing 2 ounces of finely ground sulfur (325 mesh) and 1 ounce of powdered soap or detergent to a gallon of lukewarm water. The feathers should be wet to the skin, and the head ducked. It is always advisable to dip fowl on warm, sunny days or in heated buildings. Treatment with either sulfur dusts or dips should be repeated as required.

An effective and quick treatment to eliminate northern fowl mites consists of applying to the roosts or litter a chemical, the vapors of which will destroy the mites on the birds. Undiluted nicotine sulfate (40 percent) may be applied with a brush to the roosts, perches, and other roosting surfaces, at the rate of 1 to 1.5 ounces for each 30 feet of roost. As nicotine sulfate volatilizes rapidly, it should be used shortly before roosting time. About three applications a week apart are required to end infestations. The buildings should be ventilated after nicotine sulfate is used.

Another easy and less hazardous way is to treat the litter with malathion. A 4-percent malathion dust applied to the litter only, 1 pound to 50 square feet of floor space, will control the northern fowl mite. The dust should be applied uniformly with a plunger or rotary hand duster or a shaker can or jar.

An old, simple, and effective treatment for the scaly-leg mite consists in dipping the feet and legs of infested birds in crude petroleum. Usually one treatment is enough, but a second treatment about a month later may be required in heavy infestations.

A mixture of 1 part of kerosene to 2 parts of raw linseed oil also may be used as a dip for the feet and legs. Repeated treatments every 2 to 4 weeks, until healing takes place, may be required with this mixture.

For controlling the depluming mite, old, established remedies continue to be effective. The birds may be dipped in a bath containing 2 ounces of wettable sulfur per gallon of water. If spot treatment on a few birds is all that seems necessary, a sulfur ointment can be rubbed into the affected areas of the skin. The ointment can be prepared by mixing 1 tablespoonful of flowers of sulfur in one-half cup of lard or vaseline.

I told not to ask...
Steve.
 
Sure can..it works as an antibacterial, antifungal preparation...if you can believe all the information out there.
roll.png
Check your protein levels in your feeds. Something is causing this bumblefoot and it could be high protein levels creating infectious gout in your bird.

X2. Vitamin A also aids in digestion, appetite, resistance to infection and some parasites as well. So deficiencies can bring on other problems too. Probiotics and enzymes are a necessity also. Beekissed, my motivation isn't to simply argue about castor oil as a wormer. I'll tell a brief story. Years ago a DE based product to be used as a feed additive came out and I spoke with the creator and owner of the company who made the product. Having kept birds for more than 30 years, I thought I'd try something more "natural". He claimed that used regularly, his product would not only prevent, but destroy any intestinal worms or eggs that may be ingested by poultry. I used it for a year according to label instructions thinking it must be working. That was until I found worms. The owner of the product made some money, so he made out. I still had to treat birds with something else.

I've seen hundreds of claims over the years with little proof to back them up, and I see it as a disservice to new folks getting started with poultry to just repeat those claims, and later find out their birds are sick. That would be dishonest of me. Benzimidazole classes of wormers have proven to work every time with no side effects from my birds, and there's plenty of research to refer to. I focus much on the nutritional content of what I feed to my chickens, so when you start on the subject of nutrition, I'm sure we'd find much to agree about. Cheers to happy and healthy chickens.
 
Last edited:
I can see where you would be skeptical..and in truth, I know nothing about worms in chickens. I've only seen it once in one of my birds in the past 37 yrs of keeping birds and they were not under my care or on my land when the hen contracted these worms. I work from the other end of things, normally, and use methods that prevent heavy parasite loads from ever occurring. I find it the easiest way to manage livestock, rather than a curative approach. So I have no idea about chemical dewormers..never used one..and cannot attest to their efficacy. I also cannot truly claim that castor oil has cured a worm load in my own flocks because I've never seen any of my birds, but that one hen, have any intestinal worms..and hers was only discovered upon processing.

I can only go by what it does in humans and what it may have done for my meat birds brought from a place of poor flock management. And, also, from others on BYC who have used it on heavy worm loads in their own flocks that have been resolved.
 
Last edited:
Sure would. The feed mix doesn't sound too bad, maybe feeding too much? Is he a heavy bird? If he had it before and it has recurred, there has to be an underlying cause.
Thanks Bee. He is a pretty big bird, I should have weighed him last pm when I grabbed him to look at his leg. He is limping on it today so maybe he hurt himself jumping off the roost and rest overnight helped. I still obviously need to treat everyone.
 
How will I know if the treatment is actually working? If it takes a long time to regrow scales, then how will I know if I killed the mites? Will the legs look any better? I need to know or else one could be applying oil indefinitely and never know.
 
That's something only some time will tell. You'll either start to see those scales shed off and new ones showing underneath(this can take some time) or you will see the condition of the scales and feet worsen if it didn't stop the mite predation. With my birds I could tell in a matter of days that the scales were less raised up and dried looking, then some time later the old, brown and dry scales that had been lifted up and gnarly looking were gone and new, golden scales were showing on the legs. After that happened I repeated the treatment, sort of as a final dose and a preventative.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom