Questionable symptoms in newborn chicks, 4 died, 1 left. Please help ASAP!

Pics

ChickenMama308

Songster
Mar 17, 2018
123
71
101
My 2 year old hen just had 5 chicks with a high mortality rate...

The newborn chick symptoms all came within a day or two of the chicks hatching:

- General weakness, tiredness, dozing off, low energy, limpness, closed eyes
- inability or lack of desire to eat / drink
- consistent yawn-like reflex of opening the mouth wide and up
- small amount of blood crusted on skin of inner eye corners or on the skin below the eyes, as well as a little bit of blood crusted at the bellybutton
- some would regain a bit of energy with sugar, salt, apple cider vinegar, nutri-drench etc water but weakness would set in again in waves getting worse each time for the most part

The first time I saw our hen get out of her nesting box with her newborn baby chicks there was one already dead - poor thing looked as if it was trampled / squished to death under her. There were 3 chicks left, and 2 seemed healthy and chipper but there was one who was alone / couldn't keep up and was dozing off and weak. He was frequently opening his mouth wide in a way that looked like yawning, or some kind of gag-like reflex reaction with opening the mouth wide and up. His eyes were closed the whole time I saw him, and body became fairly limp. There was a small amount of blood crusted on his skin outside the inner corners of his eyes. He wouldn't eat or drink. I brought him inside and tried to google the symptoms but nothing seemed to match or seem completely evident. He died shortly after. The next day it was another chick... All the same symptoms. I tried giving salt and sugar water to them with a dropper, but was never able to give him food. No pasty vent, but I did notice a small amount of crusted blood at the belly button. He went through waves of feeling better and then getting weak / closed eyes / mouth reflexing again etc. They died that evening. Same thing with the chick the next day, even with nutrid-rench and applecider vinegar in the water, and small amounts of yogurt fed. A small amount of blood on the skin under their eyes showed up closer to her death and there was small amounts of crusted blood at the bellybutton. They died as well. The last chick hatched later and I was better equipped and acted faster with her and have gotten her to a place today that though she has had weaker moments here and there, she has seemed so much better in the past 12 or so hours and has been able to eat solids - fresh garlic, yogurt, cooked egg yolk, medicated feed. She still would have slight moments of tiredness that didn't seem 100% normal, and once in a blue moon one of those yawns would come out after she would be sleeping / resting. There were red and black mites present on all of them, the least amount was found on the one i still have living.

The mama hen has had a relatively pale comb for the past months, and one of the other hens out of the 3 in the coop. The mama hen has seemed to have a bit of a loss of appetite recently but she's always been about half the size of the other Rhode Island Reds in comparison and she acted otherwise very normal and seemed healthy. I'm not sure what breed the mom / broody hen is, she was a wild chick I rescued from our property. From searching online though she looks as if she is a legbar or at least part legbar. I am not sure which rooster it was that inseminated her... there are about 4 different possibilities.


However, reading up on what could be happening, I was wondering if it may be Coccidiosis. Heeding all warnings and not wanting to lose her I went and bought Corid and have given her the dosage over the past 8 hours or so. I put Corid in the water for all the chickens, for our raised chickens as well as the wild chickens to drink. But now I'm wondering if I should even be giving Corid to the baby as well as everyone else. It's hard because I just want to make sure the little one makes it and obviously protect everyone else as well but I don't want to do the wrong thing. I'll probably take in a stool sample tomorrow, unfortunately it's an hour drive and it's been hard to juggle my everyday life with all of this. I'm just wondering if anyone has any experience or educated guesses as to what is going on as well as if you have any advice at all.

Thank you so much, I look forward to signing in again in the morning.


Some background info; We live in a rural area on an unfenced acre with a range of 10-20 wild chickens that roam our property (with newcomers visiting once in a while) and have personally raised 3 two year old hens in an outdoor fully mesh / open aired coop with sand and wood chip floors, and we began free-ranging them with the other wild chickens about 4 months ago. We live in Hawaii by the ocean - it doesn't get very cold here but it has been raining and some days there is lots of sun.
 
Update: I let the mama hen in our house with the baby chick and they have bonded and mama is sitting over baby now :) So happy!!!!!!!!!! Having my partner treat the coop today and watching over their interactions. Such a blessing! We're happy to have them in here, mess and all, until we sort out the coop. Will keep you all posted. Thank you so much!!!!!!!!!!!
:hugs
Babies need their Mommas.
Best wishes. It's heartbreaking to separate them..
Clean the Coop...:hugs
 
Assuming the chick continues doing really well I would also love to reunite the mama hen and baby as soon as possible in hopes she’ll raise her, ive been allowing them to communicate to each other but not touch. I plan to completely clean out and disinfect the coop tomorrow and as of now I am on the Corid program for the chick as well as all the hens etc so waiting on that unless the corid / cocci self-diagnosis turns out to be incorrect...
 
Assuming the chick continues doing really well I would also love to reunite the mama hen and baby as soon as possible in hopes she’ll raise her, ive been allowing them to communicate to each other but not touch. I plan to completely clean out and disinfect the coop tomorrow and as of now I am on the Corid program for the chick as well as all the hens etc so waiting on that unless the corid / cocci self-diagnosis turns out to be incorrect...
I would reunite them and fingers crossed it works. The longer you wait the higher the chances of her not to take it back. It's a gamble. My one Hen is raising a single Chick right now. I keep them separate from the flock to cut out any stress to the Hen and put them back with the flock once Momma is totally stress free and raises Baby..
At about 5 to 10 days old..
 
I would reunite them and fingers crossed it works. The longer you wait the higher the chances of her not to take it back. It's a gamble. My one Hen is raising a single Chick right now. I keep them separate from the flock to cut out any stress to the Hen and put them back with the flock once Momma is totally stress free and raises Baby..
At about 5 to 10 days old..

I agree but I’m also nervous that the baby will receive more cocci or get sick again in general, but I guess if I keep her / them on the Corid program maybe it’ll be ok?
 
IMG_0167.JPG
IMG_0272.JPG
My Momma Pearl and Chicken Little...:frow
I don't think it's medical and believe Momma got stressed..
 
I believe it is coccidiosis. You said they had mites and the stress of the mites feeding on your birds can and will cause a coccidiosis out break. Any weakness, stress or illness will cause outbreaks even in mature flocks. Continue the corid at 5 days on, 5 days off, and 5 days on again. Baby can have it too. She can be reunited with mom since they are all being treated but at this point, mom might just be done with her broodiness now.
 
I could try RE-introducing the chick to mama right now while it’s dark and chilly for the chick? Mama is not sitting on nest anymore but still has ‘broody talk’ all day long. I feel there’s a chance she’d hop down from the roost and because it’s dark the baby will forget and me and warm up to mama?!
Wait till morning she needs to be awake and you need to watch them..
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom