So according to https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/the-great-big-giant-mareks-disease-faq.66077/ a mareks vaccination is accomplished by injecting a chick with a harmless form of the virus (MDV-3) which allows the immune system to recognize and fight the deadly strain (MDV-1). If the bird becomes infected with the deadly variant post-vaccination and lives it now becomes a carrier leading to the myth that vaccinated birds are always deadly to non-vaccinated.
My question is what if the immunized bird does NOT encounter the deadly strain and only has MDV-3? Does it spread that with the same virulence and could chicks raised in a coop infected with MDV-3 be considered de-facto immunized?
Now I know the first answer from anyone who's read the faq will be no because it explicitly states that the immunization must be done inside 36 hours of hatch and that the chicks must not be exposed to the deadly strain for 3 weeks after that to give the immune system time to develop the immunity which makes sense to me but only the 3 weeks parts. I can think of no good reason why exposing a bird to the non-deadly strain via any means at any age would be less effective unless exposure to the deadly strain also occurs before the 3-week window is up.
Anyway I have a batch of chicks, 2 months old currently, that I'm running with vaccinated birds that I believe/hope are clean and will have more definitive answers in a few months I guess but I'd like to try selling/giving away the cockerels before killing them as I'm not able to keep them but not sure what the ethical way of describing them to potential buyers would be. Probably safe to run with vaccinated flocks but proceed with caution otherwise I think. Would appreciate other opinions but preferably ones backed by a medical/veterinary degree as opposed to what your neighbour or some guy at a swap-meet told you.
My question is what if the immunized bird does NOT encounter the deadly strain and only has MDV-3? Does it spread that with the same virulence and could chicks raised in a coop infected with MDV-3 be considered de-facto immunized?
Now I know the first answer from anyone who's read the faq will be no because it explicitly states that the immunization must be done inside 36 hours of hatch and that the chicks must not be exposed to the deadly strain for 3 weeks after that to give the immune system time to develop the immunity which makes sense to me but only the 3 weeks parts. I can think of no good reason why exposing a bird to the non-deadly strain via any means at any age would be less effective unless exposure to the deadly strain also occurs before the 3-week window is up.
Anyway I have a batch of chicks, 2 months old currently, that I'm running with vaccinated birds that I believe/hope are clean and will have more definitive answers in a few months I guess but I'd like to try selling/giving away the cockerels before killing them as I'm not able to keep them but not sure what the ethical way of describing them to potential buyers would be. Probably safe to run with vaccinated flocks but proceed with caution otherwise I think. Would appreciate other opinions but preferably ones backed by a medical/veterinary degree as opposed to what your neighbour or some guy at a swap-meet told you.