If you are dealing with chicks, you have a 6 month span til they lay, hopefully, there is not "Antibiotics" in them any longer.thank you for the detailed information. I had been starting to get confused. Had a chick die and one seem sock with cocci and have been treating with corid. I fidnt mix new eaxh day since the 3 chixks cant drink even close to a gallon in a day. I was recently informed that i hVe to mix new each day. I dont know why that is. I got another bloody dropping after 2 weeks on the non fresh corid and started over mixing fresh each day. I only can hope it takes care of the problem and i am even treating for the right thing. I was thinking about doing antibiotic but i dont want to not be able to eat the eggs when they do finally start laying.....
You are correct in your assumption of "Amprolium"
We can compare Amprolium to Aspirin, for example, and all it's "Brand Name" applications...
If you are feeding baby chicks, used medicated feed.
As they grow to 2-3 months of age, they should be fine & weaned off "medicated" feed.
After that, I keep Corid (powder) in my barn, and feed Stater grower whichs has no medication.
IF I see any signs of Cocci, I give Corid in their ONLY source of water immediately.
There has never been any issue of death via cocci, ever.
And you can go get a vet test, on POO from a chicken & YES it will say the bird has TONS of cocci ...and the reason why is it is present in the soil & will always be there in the bird's gut.
So many BYCers get a STOOL sample tested & come screaming back : I HAVE COCCI !!!"
well, duh, we all have it, it is there 24-7 for ever and our birds are immuno-acclimated against it.
So, if you think a 2 year old bird dies of cocci, wrong.
It is there, in our fowl's gut.....what kills a 2 or 3 year old bird is never cocci.
And a stool test will say YES THERE IS COCCI !!!!
DUH !!!
What we have to do is acclimate our babies to the parasite, and from then on, the parasite passes theough, unable to harm the gut lining on our birds.
So, yes, taking a stool sample on a chicken is going to show cocci.
G'night all