Feeding wild mice to hens?

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I love this image [not mine]. Could the birds get tapeworm from mice?

That is tooooo funnY I'll have to try to get a picture when my birds get a mouse...
I have found three nests this summer: 1) under my storage "trash cans" (they will be put up off the ground for next winter) 1)under a brick holding something "up" off the dirt in the coop (also getting this off the ground) and 3) ) in a straw bale that was "outside" the coop but obviously a very nice nesting place....I found one nest in it, and I think the flock found another. The day after I found the first nest of "pinkies" as the little ones are called, they viciously ripped apart an entire bale of straw ...to get to the middle I think, as I bet they could "hear" them in there, and I could not!
I've wondered about the worms too....if a cat who eats a mouse can get them....couldn't a hen?
I had a hen try to swallow one WHOLE and almost pass out, her comb started looking purple, she sat down and couldn't stand up, I tried to pull the mouse out (its tail was still hanging out) and she jumped off & ran off with it. I followed again to make sure she wouldn't suffocate from eating the thing...but she got it down! there is definitely a gross factor involved.
 
I think a tip on my scratch feed bag says "Keep rodents/wild birds away from food, they may carry disease". Remember that some parasites are generalists, so I would not risk it.
Wild birds definitely can bring in avian specific mites, lice, and diseases.
There may be some mammalian diseases that could infect a bird, but I believe the probability is pretty low.

I've wondered about the worms too....if a cat who eats a mouse can get them....couldn't a hen?
Mammal to mammal much more likely than mammal to avian.
 
Wild birds definitely can bring in avian specific mites, lice, and diseases.
There may be some mammalian diseases that could infect a bird, but I believe the probability is pretty low.

Mammal to mammal much more likely than mammal to avian.
Eating rats and mice probably not such a bigger deal as mice and rats living within the area of chickens. Mice poop and urine in chicken food, definite transfer of mites from rodents to chickens. I use glue traps underneath my metal trash cans as the mice invariably dig under them and wait to come out and eat. I am now reserving one dog kennel for traps (electronic, glue, poison and old time traps) and using landscaping cloth to keep the chickens out. I have found the most fun way is to sit up in the dark on stools, with friends, and use our 22's and sling shots to kill them. Saw a youtube video of some guys that were hired by a dairy farm and I was excited as they took each mouse out. So planned a night with friends and we've done it twice. Unfortunatley, I have a farm and right next to my big chicken pen is a pasture...as a matter of fact my house, workshop, pens and sheds are surrounded on all four sides with pastures. I expect this will be a lifelong fight for us. See the following two articles.
https://poultrybreeders.blogspot.com/2014/09/diseases-rats-and-mice-spread.html
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/articles/824/rodent-control-in-livestock-and-poultry-facilities/
 

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