I am worried about a wild Gallus gallus hen. She has started to be sick like at least 6 other hens and one rooster and it always ends the same. Dropped wings, twisting of neck, paralysis and eventually an inability to breathe.
One dead chicken was taken to the vet for an autopsy, but she could not find any nodules like you would expect in Mareks.
I have three different types of hens that I look after: the wild ones, Gallus gallus who just drop by every now and then, 6 local island hens who live in the bush near my home, and my own hens that I leave locked up in their coop. My own imported hens in the coop are from New Zealand and are vaccinated. The local hens are not.
I have never lost a vaccinated hen but then they do not roam. I let them out each day at 4pm for a bit of a wander around but they do not go next door.
My neighbour sprays for cockroaches and centipedes. Is it possible that the roaming hens are eating this and dying slowly of poison? I have phoned the pest controllers and they say that their sprays are not poisonous.
I see I cannot upload a video here. If there is a way I would be happy to do so.
The symptoms seem to match Mareks. Is it also possible that the imported vaccinated hens were vaccinated with a live virus. Then some wild rooster will have his wicked way with them and pass on the disease of mareks? I have not had an outbreak for over a year.
One dead chicken was taken to the vet for an autopsy, but she could not find any nodules like you would expect in Mareks.
I have three different types of hens that I look after: the wild ones, Gallus gallus who just drop by every now and then, 6 local island hens who live in the bush near my home, and my own hens that I leave locked up in their coop. My own imported hens in the coop are from New Zealand and are vaccinated. The local hens are not.
I have never lost a vaccinated hen but then they do not roam. I let them out each day at 4pm for a bit of a wander around but they do not go next door.
My neighbour sprays for cockroaches and centipedes. Is it possible that the roaming hens are eating this and dying slowly of poison? I have phoned the pest controllers and they say that their sprays are not poisonous.
I see I cannot upload a video here. If there is a way I would be happy to do so.
The symptoms seem to match Mareks. Is it also possible that the imported vaccinated hens were vaccinated with a live virus. Then some wild rooster will have his wicked way with them and pass on the disease of mareks? I have not had an outbreak for over a year.