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DISEASE |
FURTHER SIGNS THAT SUGGEST THIS
PROBLEM |
WHAT THE VET WILL NEED TO REACH A
DIAGNOSIS |
TREATMENT |
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Nestling
problem |
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Inside of
nest stained with yellow diarrhoea of nestling, youngsters stunted, increased
death rate first few days of life. |
E. coli
diarrhoea |
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Droppings,
microscopic examination, staining and/or culture |
Antibiotics.
Neomycin. Sulpha AVS in water and soft foods (egg and biscuit canary starter) |
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Pale, weak
youngsters, hen can be found dead in nest |
Blood
sucking mites |
Crusty
pinpoint feeding points visible, particularly under wings |
Recently
dead or unwell nestlings |
Moxidectin.
Spray cages with Permethrin prior to breeding |
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Nestlings
dying, 10-20 days of age, many youngsters affected and dying |
Circo
virus |
Black spot
visible in abdomen, which is an enlarged gall bladder |
Sick or
recently dead youngster for autopsy, tissue collection and histology |
Management
- Break in breeding, thorough clean of aviary, identify carrier birds |
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Juvenile
less than I year of age |
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Generally
unwell and dying birds |
Atoxplasma,
( a type of coccidian) |
Birds
usually 2-9 months, high mortality ( up to 80%, blue spot (swollen liver)
visible through abdomen. |
A sick or
recently dead bird for autopsy. Parasite eggs occasionally found in droppings. |
Sulfachlor
pyrazine reduces but does not eliminate egg shedding. Given for 5 days per
week until birds are well. |
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Any
Age |
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Main symptom
respiratory distress |
Pox |
Crusty
wart-like lesions on non-feathered part of body and/or yellow plaques inside
mouth. Difficulty in breathing, high mortality rate. |
Appearance
often diagnostic. Autopsy and histology. |
Management.
Separate birds, control insects, treat secondary diseases. |
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Blood
sucking mites. |
Pale and
lethargic. Crusty pinpoint feeding sites visible, particularly under wings |
Examination
of an unwell bird, or a recently dead bird. |
Moxidectin.
Spray cages with Permetherin |
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Air Sac
Mites |
Loss of
condition, cough, sneeze, nasal discharge, unable to sing, response to
treatment |
Moxidectin |
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Trichomoniasis
(canker) a flagellate |
Weight
loss, regurtation, dried saliva around beak |
Crop flush
from live bird |
Tubosole,
Flagyl |
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Bacterial
infection, e.g. Enterococcus faecal is |
Red watery
eyes, nasal discharge |
Live bird
for bacterial culture |
Antibiotics,
review hygiene. |
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Main symptom
diarrhoea and weight loss |
Coccidiosis |
Huddled,
fluffed and lethargic |
Droppings
collected from bird in late afternoon |
Baycox (3
mill/1L) for 48 hours. Protein supplements (sprouted seed, seeding grasses,
soft foods) |
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Mega
bacteria |
Fluffed
and under weight |
Droppings,
Autopsy of recently dead bird if available |
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Salmonella
(a bacteria) |
More prevalent
in wet times of year, outside aviary, low hygiene, exposure to mice or wild
bird droppings. |
Autopsy
and culture. Pooled dropping samples, checked 3-6 weeks after therapy to
check success. Canaries do not become carriers of Salmonella. (common in
other birds) |
Antibiotics,
Usually Baytrill. Provision of chopped greens and soft food will help prevent
dehydration, multivitamins in water, hygiene. |
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Yesinia (a
bacteria) |
As above |
Autopsy
and culture |
As above |
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Other
bacteria, e.g. E.Coli |
Some birds
may have an infection elsewhere, e.g. in eyes or sinus |
As above |
As above |
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Chlamydia |
Often also
have conjunctivitis and nasal discharge |
Throat
swab or cloacae swab or autopsy. |
Dopxycyline
(Doxyvet 1tsp/2L), Baytril (1 drop twice daily per bird or 10ml/1L of
drinking water. |
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Sudden
death |
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Toxic
exposure |
May have salivation,
diarrohoea, difficulty in breathing. |
Detailed
history |
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Starvation |
Blood in
droppings, some one else looked after birds. |
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Miscellaneous |
Scaly
face, Knemicoptes mite infection |
Crust
lesions on face and legs |
Appearance
often diagnostic. Microscopic examination of crusts |
Moxidectin
(2mg/m'l to affected birds twice! at 3 week intervals) |
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