- Jun 13, 2013
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I fear 2 new chickens have infected my flock with mycoplasma too, 8 of 15 chickens got sick, 5 of them seriously.... swollen eyes, stopped eating and a bad cough, I treated them and all got well again, but... what about setting eggs, I read that the bacteria stays in your flock, and whenever you have baby chickens, more than usual don’t survive hatching ( getting stuck in the shell) or get sick with mycoplasma and don’t make ithas anyone here got experience what happens after your chickens contracted it?
since the chickens are my pets, I really had a hard time for 2 weeks, every day fearing one of them had died during the night, I never want to go through that again, of course every now and then a chicken got something, or I had to put one of them to sleep, but I’ve never ever had something like that go through my flock! And I never want to, again![]()
I do not know its impact on hatching eggs, but I do add new chicks (from a hatchery) to my flock almost every spring and have never had any problems. My new additions have never developed symptoms.
In my experience, the intial outbreak was the worst part of the disease. Once everyone recovered, my flock returned to normal. I have a hen that will be turning 10 years old in a few weeks, not only did she survive the initial outbreak, but she is healthy and symptom free today. Mycoplasma is not a death sentence for your birds or mean you are going to be constantly treating sick birds. They can live long, healthy lives after recovering. They should however, always be considered carriers and proper measures should always be taken to prevent the spread to other flocks.