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APPPA P.O. Box 73 Hartselle, AL 35640 256-751-3925 grit@apppa.org
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American Pastured Poultry Producers Association www.apppa.org Mortality: Common Causes Please see the accompanying "Illness Flow Chart" Summer 2002 by Jeff Mattocks
When the lungs can't meet the demand for oxygen it sends a signal to the brain to increase blood flow. The heart then begins to beat faster and increases blood flow. However, the right ventricle is undersized and the heart cannot handle the return pressure. The back press then causes an over pressure in the liver, which in turn starts to seep plasma into the body cavity. (I.e. Water Belly) Therefore either the liver shuts down or the heart quits causing death. Primary preventative measures to relieve Ascites are increased quality air
flow and the prevention of night time cold stress. Other alternatives to fight
Ascites are to decrease dietary energy by feeding mash diets rather than pelleted
diets, skip-a-day feeding or limit feed access. There are side affects to skip-a-day
feeding and limited feed access. Both methods will cause frantic feeding behaviors,
which will lead to skin wounds from the birds jumping on each other to get to
the feed. Skin wounds provide prime opportunity for E-Coliform bacteria infection.
This is known as I.P. or infectious process. Many folk, particularly beginners in pastured poultry, treat their chicks like their infant children. Everyone is cautious about drafts and chills and these are things to be aware of. The downfall to being overcautious is the tendency to seal up the entire brooder so that NO fresh air can get in. Chicks require a minimum 100% air exchange 6 times in a 24 hour period. This doesn't include drafts that come in at floor level. It also does not include chilling the chicks with a rush of very cool air. It does include a subtle continuous movement of air in the brooder or any controlled environment. The problem most often encountered with poor air movement is Sinusitis. Sinusitis is a direct result of excess humidity and ammonia release from manure. The ammonia will cause an irritated respiratory tract, which causes tissue scarring, which decreases oxygen absorption to the blood stream, which accentuates Ascites. (My grammar is really not that bad. I wanted you to see the domino affect of a bad condition.) Both sinusitis and ammonia scarring will retard growth weights, if they don't kill the birds first. Both sinusitis and ammonia build up can be controlled with air quality management. Temperature Control Chicks need to regulate their own temperature. By this I mean that we provide enough area with supplied heat that the chick can find it when it needs it and get away from it when they don't. Amazingly the chicks are really smarter than I give them credit for. I only thought they were stupid because they didn't do what I thought they should. I get a couple calls each year where the chicks are very irritable and even cannibalistic. Asking my twenty questions, I find the problem is almost always excessive heat. Coccidiosis and Necrotic Enteritis Most occurrences of Coccidiosis and Enteritis will occur in the brooder. Generally
symptoms will become noticeable around day 10. The mortality will peak between
day 14 - day 21. Then the deaths will slowly reduce because the remaining chicks
have built their own immunity to coccidiosis. If either of these problems have
gotten out of hand and you are in the middle of a crisis, feed whole / raw milk
to the chicks for 7 days. This will coat the stomach and soothe the pain so
they can continue to eat and drink normally while the immune system kicks in
and protects the chick. This is the easiest method. Heart Attacks During heat stress times I recommend feeding apple cider vinegar at the rate of 1 oz per gallon of drinking water. Some people really think it works and some people say they have no results. Try it! It's cheap and you won't hurt anything. Then let me know what you think. I also encourage reducing stocking density. Especially during the mid summer to allow better AIR FLOW. Increasing the amount of available oxygen will reduce stress and unnecessary heart pumping. I am also fond of moving the broilers during the mid day. By doing this you will remove them from their old manure, improving air quality. Also new grass is cooler from evaporation and it isn't exchanging nitrogen from manure with its carbon matter. This technique won't work for everyone because not everyone is home during the midday. If you can try it, you'll like it. Curly Toe and Spraddle Leg Spraddle Leg, otherwise known as Slip Joint Tendon is either an injury or manganese deficiency. What happens is the Achilles tendon has slipped out of the joint between the foot and drumstick. The leg will stick out perpendicular to the bodyline. As with Curly Toe, if you have 2 out of 200 it is mostly likely a result of an injury. If you have 20 out of 200 you have a problem. There is NO corrective action once the tendon has slipped. Again you need to ensure that your manganese requirements are being met. It should be 70 PPM per pound of feed. For immediate treatment you can just sprinkle some manganese supplement onto the top of the feed.
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