Quote:
It is a LOT different, for two reasons:
1) the Relevant Organs are not external - they are waaaay up inside the body cavity, near the kidneys. So it is major abdominal surgery, not just a superficial 'snip snip' like in mammalian housepets/livestock.
2) birds do not do especially well with general anesthesia, and thus, no, caponizing is NOT generally done with anesthesia of any sort. It is normally done (by a practiced operator) by physically restraining the bird, cutting into the abdomen, going in and removing the testicles, and then hoping the bird lives. Which they don't always, not even with people who do gazillions of caponizations.
Someone a few months ago claimed their vet had a 'new' way of caponizing that involved a) anesthesia and b) very very low mortality, but I do not recall hearing anything further about it?
You could ask your vet, but don't hold yer breath for a 'magic bullet' solution to your rooster 'problem'.
Good luck,
Pat
It is a LOT different, for two reasons:
1) the Relevant Organs are not external - they are waaaay up inside the body cavity, near the kidneys. So it is major abdominal surgery, not just a superficial 'snip snip' like in mammalian housepets/livestock.
2) birds do not do especially well with general anesthesia, and thus, no, caponizing is NOT generally done with anesthesia of any sort. It is normally done (by a practiced operator) by physically restraining the bird, cutting into the abdomen, going in and removing the testicles, and then hoping the bird lives. Which they don't always, not even with people who do gazillions of caponizations.
Someone a few months ago claimed their vet had a 'new' way of caponizing that involved a) anesthesia and b) very very low mortality, but I do not recall hearing anything further about it?
You could ask your vet, but don't hold yer breath for a 'magic bullet' solution to your rooster 'problem'.
Good luck,
Pat