Wow. Euww. Poor hen!
I have not seen chicken tapeworms but I have seen a variety of other species tapeworms and they always look pretty much exactly like, well, tapeworms (white, and very flat and tidy and regular-looking, with mild to strong segmentation). So I would bet enormously against this being any sort of internal parasite.
Unfortunately, my best guess would be that she has shucked an ovary, or possibly a growth that was growing on the ovary. It has more or less the right tissue-like look to it. If that is the case, I would think the chances would be fairly good that (eventually fatal) internal infection would set in... but you never know.
(e.t.a. - it doesn't look like the congealed yolk material that I've seen from my two internal-layer hens... that was much more uniform in color and texture, and not at all translucent, and not tissue-y looking. I might be misinterpreting the photo of course.)
If it were my hen and she was still looking pretty perky and not very sick, I think I would be inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt. Actually I might even try a broad-spectrum antibiotic -- and mind you I am really NOT one to go flinging antibiotics around. OTOH if she were pretty sickly and unhappy-looking, and nobody came along with a better theory for what was wrong with her, I fear I'd be inclined to call it 'probably terminal' and put her out of her suffering. None of that is *recommendation*, it is just what I would do.
Very best of luck to you and the hen,
Pat
I have not seen chicken tapeworms but I have seen a variety of other species tapeworms and they always look pretty much exactly like, well, tapeworms (white, and very flat and tidy and regular-looking, with mild to strong segmentation). So I would bet enormously against this being any sort of internal parasite.
Unfortunately, my best guess would be that she has shucked an ovary, or possibly a growth that was growing on the ovary. It has more or less the right tissue-like look to it. If that is the case, I would think the chances would be fairly good that (eventually fatal) internal infection would set in... but you never know.
(e.t.a. - it doesn't look like the congealed yolk material that I've seen from my two internal-layer hens... that was much more uniform in color and texture, and not at all translucent, and not tissue-y looking. I might be misinterpreting the photo of course.)
If it were my hen and she was still looking pretty perky and not very sick, I think I would be inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt. Actually I might even try a broad-spectrum antibiotic -- and mind you I am really NOT one to go flinging antibiotics around. OTOH if she were pretty sickly and unhappy-looking, and nobody came along with a better theory for what was wrong with her, I fear I'd be inclined to call it 'probably terminal' and put her out of her suffering. None of that is *recommendation*, it is just what I would do.
Very best of luck to you and the hen,
Pat
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