- Nov 16, 2012
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But, I made a post later that directly pertains to this...On the same state website about poultry issues, can't remember the state now, but might have been texas...? Anyway...on this site it said that most adult birds have been exposed and survived...then it later goes on to say that most deaths where a bird just drops dead for no apparent reason are attributed to marek's as the birds do test positive...but they don't know if the Marek's is what killed them or not...they just know that at some point the bird was exposed to the disease and was seemingly unharmed for many years. there isn't enough science behind any of it...I'll go out on a limb here... If the ones that died, died with *any* of the many Marek's symptoms, I'd be willing to bet money that they died of Marek's. Dr Shivaprasad at UC Davis said that it is one of the most common causes of death that they see. Contact a lab near you and ask them how common it is.
Denial, it's not just a river in Egypt!
Like someone said hmm this keeps killing chickens...oh well.
I think of it as a luck of the draw kind of thing...
You pick a chick that may or may not survive exposure...but eventually through breeding chickens that have had contact and survived you are building a stronger chicken population, until you go to the feed store and pick up a different strain than the one you have at home.
Survival of the fittest and all that jazz.