Mareks is always kind of a hot-button topic. I have hatchery birds and non in my flock, and most of my hatchery birds are mareks vaccinated. My non-hatchery birds have zero vaccinations.
@Mixed flock enthusiast has Mareks in her flock and has interesting experiences and knowledge around vaccinating she was sharing with us in a hatch a long last year. Maybe she can chime in with what she knows.
as far as I know, mareks is interesting in that certain birds can be resistant to it. So it’s all over and brought in by wild birds, but some birds get it and others don’t. The point of breeding for resistance for any disease is that you are trying to continually breed until you only have resistant birds. Lots of culling and improving. Without breeding, culling, and improving the lines, there’s probably much more reason to vaccinate. A serious breeder is going to cull a chick with pasty butt because that’s indicative of a chick with some level of weakened immune system. Are you going to cull a chick you ordered for pasty butt?
if I were only going to have hatchery birds, or just hatch some on my own from others without breeding, I would get mareks vaccination on everything.
many people who do both hatchery and hatch, but don’t seriously breed, vaccinate what they can and treat the non vaccinated bird as sort of “canaries in a coal mine”.
I’m not educated enough on the long term facets of breeding, or the ways chicken immune response and resistance works, so I have a really uninformed opinion, but I have often wondered if the “breeding for resistance” is more of a trope born out of necessity, as breeders don’t have the same access to use such large dose vaccines. In other words, if the vaccines were more cost effective and widely available at smaller doses, would more people be using them? Maybe someone can help me with that view and course-correct my thoughts.
@Mixed flock enthusiast has Mareks in her flock and has interesting experiences and knowledge around vaccinating she was sharing with us in a hatch a long last year. Maybe she can chime in with what she knows.
as far as I know, mareks is interesting in that certain birds can be resistant to it. So it’s all over and brought in by wild birds, but some birds get it and others don’t. The point of breeding for resistance for any disease is that you are trying to continually breed until you only have resistant birds. Lots of culling and improving. Without breeding, culling, and improving the lines, there’s probably much more reason to vaccinate. A serious breeder is going to cull a chick with pasty butt because that’s indicative of a chick with some level of weakened immune system. Are you going to cull a chick you ordered for pasty butt?
if I were only going to have hatchery birds, or just hatch some on my own from others without breeding, I would get mareks vaccination on everything.
many people who do both hatchery and hatch, but don’t seriously breed, vaccinate what they can and treat the non vaccinated bird as sort of “canaries in a coal mine”.
I’m not educated enough on the long term facets of breeding, or the ways chicken immune response and resistance works, so I have a really uninformed opinion, but I have often wondered if the “breeding for resistance” is more of a trope born out of necessity, as breeders don’t have the same access to use such large dose vaccines. In other words, if the vaccines were more cost effective and widely available at smaller doses, would more people be using them? Maybe someone can help me with that view and course-correct my thoughts.
