air sac mites in wild gouldians
- Craig52
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- Joined: 11 Nov 2011, 19:26
- Location: victoria
werty wrote:How does the wild gouldian survive with airsac mites?
It doesn't it dies,some say the demise of the wild gouldians was caused by airsac mites others give different reasons but include airsac mites as well habitat,predation and lack of nest sites due to the more aggressive longtail finch. Craig
I have been doing some reading on the save the gouldian websiteCraig52 wrote:werty wrote:How does the wild gouldian survive with airsac mites?
It doesn't it dies,some say the demise of the wild gouldians was caused by airsac mites others give different reasons but include airsac mites as well habitat,predation and lack of nest sites due to the more aggressive longtail finch. Craig
They were saying they thought the air sac was killing them off but once thry supplied nests out in the wild the population started to rise
So if air sac mites killing them why are they still out there
- Myzomela
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- Location: Melbourne Vic
Because like any disease the birds as a population are able to cope with them better over time i.e. the more resistant birds survive to breed. If you remove the stressors e.g. looking for nest sites- and also increase the breeding opportunities then the population increases. On the other hand if the population is stressed- food shortage, competition for nests etc then diseases which the birds normally cope with overwhelm them.
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so if you keep your gouldians well fed and looked after you don't have to treat them for airsac mites?Myzomela wrote:Because like any disease the birds as a population are able to cope with them better over time i.e. the more resistant birds survive to breed. If you remove the stressors e.g. looking for nest sites- and also increase the breeding opportunities then the population increases. On the other hand if the population is stressed- food shortage, competition for nests etc then diseases which the birds normally cope with overwhelm them.
as anyone tried breeding gouldians with no airsac mite medications?
- Craig52
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- Joined: 11 Nov 2011, 19:26
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werty, your second last paragraph answered your question but in saying that keep an eye on newly purchased birds.Keep them separate to your own healthy stock and treat them if you think they may have airsac mite,symptoms are excessive beak wiping,audible clicking and asthma like symptoms in really bad cases.werty wrote:so if you keep your gouldians well fed and looked after you don't have to treat them for airsac mites?Myzomela wrote:Because like any disease the birds as a population are able to cope with them better over time i.e. the more resistant birds survive to breed. If you remove the stressors e.g. looking for nest sites- and also increase the breeding opportunities then the population increases. On the other hand if the population is stressed- food shortage, competition for nests etc then diseases which the birds normally cope with overwhelm them.
as anyone tried breeding gouldians with no airsac mite medications?
I think a lot of breeders get bogged down and worried about airsac mite and other problems that might be,with todays medications for ASM the offending bird can be removed and treated and/or the whole flock can be treated at the same time with little or no effects to them. Craig
Do you think by treated them for air sac mites we are producing weaker birds?Craig52 wrote:werty, your second last paragraph answered your question but in saying that keep an eye on newly purchased birds.Keep them separate to your own healthy stock and treat them if you think they may have airsac mite,symptoms are excessive beak wiping,audible clicking and asthma like symptoms in really bad cases.werty wrote:so if you keep your gouldians well fed and looked after you don't have to treat them for airsac mites?Myzomela wrote:Because like any disease the birds as a population are able to cope with them better over time i.e. the more resistant birds survive to breed. If you remove the stressors e.g. looking for nest sites- and also increase the breeding opportunities then the population increases. On the other hand if the population is stressed- food shortage, competition for nests etc then diseases which the birds normally cope with overwhelm them.
as anyone tried breeding gouldians with no airsac mite medications?
I think a lot of breeders get bogged down and worried about airsac mite and other problems that might be,with todays medications for ASM the offending bird can be removed and treated and/or the whole flock can be treated at the same time with little or no effects to them. Craig
- elferoz777
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Antibiotics create weaker birds. They help the weaker survive and pass on their genes and also create resistant strains of bacteria. This is how you lose them ASM is easily treated and if you quarantine all new comers before they go to your flock you should be right.
The other advice you have been given is good advice.
The other advice you have been given is good advice.
Breeding Project 2020-2025.
agate mosaic canaries, agate yellow mosaic canaries, red zebs, self bengos and goldfinch mules.
agate mosaic canaries, agate yellow mosaic canaries, red zebs, self bengos and goldfinch mules.
Maybe instead of treating new birds in quarantine that show symptoms, just get rid of any birds that show the symptomselferoz777 wrote:Antibiotics create weaker birds. They help the weaker survive and pass on their genes and also create resistant strains of bacteria. This is how you lose them ASM is easily treated and if you quarantine all new comers before they go to your flock you should be right.
The other advice you have been given is good advice.