What about smart weed or knotweed? I'm also curious about bindweed since it's part of the morning glory family. I have an abundance of these two this year and have lost 5 birds to the same symptoms in one coop. The other coop which does not have these weeds is fine and healthy.
Thanks for any input!
If you're talking about Japanese Knotweed, no, it's not toxic according to almost everything I've read, though some disagree, but it is harvested in bulk for animal and human fodder in some places and has health benefits.
It's helpful to get the botanical name and a sure ID on a plant being suspected of being toxic, because so many plants share a common name.
'Smartweed' needs more definition. People eat it, but as noted in the article below, there are many species that look very similar.
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As CrazyTalk said, the 'toxic' lists are often far from accurate, and anything is toxic in the right dose even if it is a lifesaver in a lesser dose.
Also, many things are listed as 'toxic' simply because they are dangerous to horses. Horses may be the most sensitive livestock I know of when it comes to having bad reactions to plants other species eat without any negative results.
Bindweed is listed as 'mildly toxic' to 'grazing animals', and in some research killed some mice. That said, toxicity testing done on animals often involves feeding massive amounts to determine the toxic value, and/or starving the animals so they have nothing else to eat, as was done to the mice mentioned below. So outside of laboratory conditions, many toxic plants aren't actually anywhere near so dangerous at all. Just about anything's toxic if you force feed large enough quantities of it.
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Animals that are caged and do not have other sources of greenery often make bad decisions in their diets. But I think your hens might have died of something else.
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Best wishes.