Common poultry
diseases and their control measures
Fowl Coccidiosis
This disease is caused by a protozoan parasite of the intestine and can cause
very heavy losses in poultry particularly up to the age of 12 weeks.
Symptoms:
The
chicks lose weight and their appetites.
Their
feathers become ruffled and soiled.
Combs
are pale and they tend to huddle together in corners.
Droppings
are watery and greenish or brown in colour often containing blood.
Control Measures:
Preventive:
Use of
Bifuran in feed at all times.
Keep the
litter dry and loose and keep chicks isolated in freshly sterilised pens.
Curative
measures:
Use
Bifuran in the water according to the manufacturers instructions.
Isolate
sick birds.
When the
attack dies down disinfect litter and sterilize pens.
Ranikhet Disease
A highly infectious and fatal viral disease, it attacks poultry of all ages. Also
known as New Castle disease.
Symptoms:
Inactivity,
droopiness and sleepiness.
Pale
combs and wattles which later turn blue.
Full and
distended crop.
Gasping
for air, wheezing and coughing.
Green
diarrhoea with foul odour.
The head
may be twisted to the side, drawn back or down between the legs.
Convulsions,
paralysis and incoordination.
(b) Control measures:
Fowl Pox:
A viral disease that can affect birds at any age resulting in high mortality
rates.
Symptoms:
Formation
of greyish spots or blisters on wattles which after several days enlarge and develop into
wartlike eruptions with scales.
Removal
of scales results in rough, raw bleeding wounds.
Formation
of hard crust in 10-14 days.
Control Measures:
A bacterial disease contaminated through feed, water and by contact through
carriers.
Symptoms:
Watery
discharge from eyes and nose and sometimes sticking of eyelids.
Noticeable
difficulty in breathing, shaking of head and wheezing.
Odorous,
cheesy droppings.
Soiled
feathers under the wings with fowl odour.
b Control Measures:
Observe
strict sanitary condition and make certain that an adequate source of Vitamin A is
provided in the diet
Infected
birds should be culled and destroyed and the house, feeders and waterers thoroughly
disinfected.
An
injection of antibiotics is also helpful.
Worm Infestation:
Internal parasitic worms are common in poultry and will always be present in
small numbers. However, when present in excess they can seriously affect the health and
productivity of birds.
Control measures
External Parasites:
There are many different external parasities harboured by poultry. The commonest
are mites, fleas, lice and ticks.
Symptoms:
Control Measures:
Tick, lice, and flea powder should be rubbed into the feathers and skin of the
birds.
When each batch of birds is cleared spray the entire house and surrounding ground
with malathion or any suitable pesticide.
A regular spray of creosote will kill these pests and, at the same time, preserve
the structure of the house.
Fowl Cholera:
A bacterial disease contaminated mostly through feed and water.
Acute Form:
Chronic Form:
Control Measures:
Affected
birds should be segregated.
2.Treated
with (0.2 per cent) Sod.Sulphamezathine in drinking water or by injecting broad spectrum
antibiotic, like `Terramycin (40 mg per kg by wt.)
3.Control
is achieved by timely vaccination.
Marek's Disease
The disease is caused by a virus which is spread from an infected chicken to a
non-infected one through the air, poultry dust, by contact, sometimes faeces. Greatest
susceptibility from 6-26 weeks of age.
Symptoms:
Paralysis
of legs and/or wings
Laboured
breathing
Whistling
and circling movements
Unilateral
and bilateral blindness.
On
postmortem examination whitish nodules in muscles of thigh, neck, kidneys, testes and in
ovaries are seen.
Control Measures:
|
Ag.
Technologies
(Poultry
Mgmt.)
|