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Welcome to BYC...sorry you're having troubles.If my chickens have little black bugs on them, what do I treat them with? We've never had this problem before. Also, if I have bites on me, do I need to be concerned that the bugs are now in my house if I brought the chicken in for a few days for some tlc?
If they are tiny black bugs they are almost certainly mites. Do as @EggSighted4Life and @aart have suggested. One of the approved treatments for poultry mites and lice in the US is permethrin. Spray works really well, and I suggest that you use spray in your coop. If it's not too cold where you are, use spray on the birds. If it is cold, use dust.If my chickens have little black bugs on them, what do I treat them with? We've never had this problem before. Also, if I have bites on me, do I need to be concerned that the bugs are now in my house if I brought the chicken in for a few days for some tlc?
Did you know that it's not water soluble and that it does *not* treat capillary worms?Put 1 cc injectable ivermectin per gallon of water. Make sure it is their only drinking water source for two days. Don't eat eggs for 14 days after use and don't use on birds you intend to slaughter for food. Repeat in 10-14 days. It'll deworm them (all except tapeworms) and get rid of scaly leg more too.
Did you know that it's not water soluble and that it does *not* treat capillary worms?
There is a vet that says egg withdrawal time is more than 14 days, and she allegedly got her information from FARAD.Don't eat eggs for 14 days after use and don't use on birds you intend to slaughter for food.
There are many studies and posts that say it will not treat worms in poultry.It'll deworm them (all except tapeworms) and get rid of scaly leg more too.
How do you know it worked? Did you have before and after fecals done? If not, you'll never know.I have been told it is not "water soluble" ; however, from experience, it works whether it is water soluble or not. Fwiw, other breeders I know with large flocks also tell me they use it for mite and worm control.
I've also had several necropsies done by the state, and none of them revealed any type of parasite, same with most necropsies done here, and the majority of them were *never* de-wormed. So a worm free necropsy doesn't mean that ivermectin worked.I have taken many a dead bird to the State lab to find out why it died (more than a couple of dozen over the years). I have not had a capillary worm found in one of these lab examinations (and they tell you everything, every parasite, external and internal).
I agree, and would like to see concrete evidence from people that ivermectin in water does treat lice, mites, and all but tapeworms, as well as something about egg and meat withdrawal.There is a LOT of misinformation on the internet.