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I have seen this too.Just an observation on some of the posts I've seen on BYC. A general reluctance to medicate, not even coccidiostat.
Yes, because many here are growing chickens for food that doesn't have any drugs in them.Just an observation on some of the posts I've seen on BYC. A general reluctance to medicate, not even coccidiostat.
Have also seen the knee jerk response to dump all kinds of meds into birds without much forethought.I have seen this too.
I've seen that too, and some people probably say that about me.Have also seen the knee jerk response to dump all kinds of meds into birds without much forethought.
Did you figure out what there were?
It warms my cockles to hear you say this. You are so right! I haven't read through the thread yet, but what you have are ascaridia. It can be difficult to distinguish these from Heterakis. I LOVE that you measured them. I can't tell you how many veterinarians ask me what the heck this thing is and they don't give me any information. (forget size, I mean things like what kind of animal is this from and what is the sample? Blood? Poop? Skin scraping?)Well, I also have horses so I’m trying to learn. With any livestock you really should be doing a fecal float before and after deworming protocols. But that’s really expensive so I end up doing fecal floats once or twice a year on my horses. Resistance is a huge deal with worms in all livestock. You give them a wormer for something they don’t need, and there’s residues left in their system. Future bugs use that to build resistance to deworming medication.
if you know exactly which worms you have and don’t have, you can use more specific medications targeting to just that parasite. In the long run, if you stay on top of it, you can be deworming the “high shedding” animals more often as the problems develop and not even have to use wormers on those without the worms.
it may still fit in my scenario that a broad spectrum is worth it in this specific instance.
Disagree. I think these are ascaridia.Your pics are of cecal worms, treatment is the same for roundworms. One day dose followed in ten days with another one day dose. I prefer Valbazen (albendazole) or Safeguard (fenbendazole).
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You measure from the outermost point of the egg.Thank you! Do you know when I measure if I measure from the inner or outer ring?