- Jul 9, 2012
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Trust me, you will see them, they are only tiny but you will see them on your birds, and in the coop.....Don't laugh... Should I be able to see the mites on my birds? If not how can I determine if they have mites?
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Trust me, you will see them, they are only tiny but you will see them on your birds, and in the coop.....Don't laugh... Should I be able to see the mites on my birds? If not how can I determine if they have mites?
Not always. Mites don't live on the chicken, but rather come out at night. You should see them when it's dark out. Go out to the coop with a flashlight and check their vent area. That is the blood sucking place of choice. The Northern Fowl Mite is the mite that lives on the chicken. Not as common as the typical mite you are thinking of.Trust me, you will see them, they are only tiny but you will see them on your birds, and in the coop.....
That's what I said. The northern Fowl Mite lives on the host.Some mites can and do live on chickens. Here's a link:
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ig140
Common Red Chicken Mite
The common red mite (Figure 5) is found on domestic fowl throughout the world, parasitizing chickens, turkeys, pigeons, wild birds and occasionally man. Older fowl exhibit similar symptoms of infestation as those parasitized by northern fowl mite. Young chickens will usually die when attacked by this mite. The red mite also serves as the vector for avian spirochetes.
Figure 5. Red chicken mite.
Credits: J. F. Butler, University of Florida
The red mite hides in cracks and crevices during the day and crawls onto the host at night for a blood meal. The life cycle is similar to the northern fowl mite and also can be completed in as little as 7 days. Premise treatment as well as bird treatment aids in the control of this mite since much of its life is spent off the host.
How is the weather there?I checked I do not see any mites. They seem to been fine by appearence but only getting 3-4 eggs a day compared to 28-34 last week. They do not seem to be lethargic or inactive. Puzzled...
Change in weather can throw them off. Molt can start any time now.Mid 80's and humid. Typical Georgia weather but we have had an extremly hot summer and they laid all summer.