^^Not true, there are organizations that will take in feral cats to re-home as barn cats or for people who need to get rid of rats or other things. I'm not sure if you go right to them to pick up the cats or if you have to either get them yourself/get animal control to do it, but they WILL take...
Most big universities have diagnostic labs like that, but some only do post-mortem diagnostics. You could try to see if any universities in your area offer phone call diagnostics.
I live in CT and our state university UConn has an avian diagnostic lab whose number is (860) 486-3738, you may have to dial in a 1 before hand if you are out of state. Usually they put a person on the phone who asks all about symptoms and everything, and because they are a diagnostic lab their...
If I were you I would definitely try to find a vet that can see chickens, especially if you are taking care of the chicken for a friend.
First thing you should do is make sure she is as calm as possible, because a stressed chicken is going to seem much sicker than she may really be. If you...
I don't know what this could be, but you should definitely take him to a vet, first because you don't know for sure what he he has (hopefully they will know), and because you can't treat him yourself if you don't know what he has (hopefully there is a treatment for him). You should separate him...
Mareks is possible I guess but if it lasted a month already then it would have to have been exposed to Marek's more recently (as opposed to catching it from a hatchery or wherever you got it from). Also you would need to separate the chick immediately, you probably should anyway because it...
Possibly silver sebright? Guessing based on the black mottling on the back, the green-ish legs, plus the small size.
Mine was really light like that, but I also know usually there is more gray and black on the body.
OEGB is usually a solid guess also, they're pretty common in bantam selections.
Your best bet is to compare them to each other. If one is feathering faster or slower than the others, that could be a sign, or if one's comb becomes larger and redder way earlier. EE's are tough because they're mixes so they can get genes from all over the place.
Going to guess Easter Eggers based on the green legs, somewhat puffy cheeks (especially on the darkest red one) and the non-conforming to any other breed standards.
I agree that they're EE's. They're nice looking though. They all seem to have the puffy cheeks and green-ish leg coloring.
Pure Ameracauna are really hard to find. You would need to find a special breeder to get them. Even if hatcheries advertise "pure ameracauna," it's probably not a pure...
The dye isn't really the problem with blue-kote, it's the antibiotics you want off because that is what could irritate the tissue. Definitely make sure they are eating soft food if they are having trouble passing their poop. Yogurt, crumble made into a mash by watering it down, chopped up hard...
I would definitely try to get the blue-kote off, and sooner is better when fixing the prolapse. They know when something is wrong and they will pick at it and make it worse.