1. Chickens that have just hatched under stress are very sensitive to the external environment because the thermoregulatory center is immature. When the external environment changes sharply, they can't effectively regulate their body temperature, and their immunity is low, causing symptoms of the digestive system, and the discharged feces are different and thick, causing anal paste.
2. Overeating after dehydration is due to long-distance transportation or late drinking for the first time. Chicken dehydration causes blood concentration, resulting in pale and swollen kidneys and urate deposition. At this time, if a large amount of normal water without electrolyte is supplemented, chicks will have diarrhea due to high water seepage, discharge viscous white thin feces, and stick to perianal villi, causing anal paste, and in severe cases, water poisoning will cause acute death.
3. High sugar content in drinking water In order to prevent chicks from losing water and affecting their physiological activities, glucose, vitamins and antibiotics are usually added to the initial drinking water. Because of the high glucose concentration in drinking water or long drinking time, the viscosity of intestinal contents increases, and the discharged feces stick around the anus, resulting in anal paste.
4. Dyspepsia is the most common cause of chicken anal paste. The digestive organs of newly hatched chicks are small, and their digestive functions are not yet fully developed. If you feed them with high crude protein, or eat too late, it will easily lead to indigestion and anal paste.
5. Chicken white dysentery Chickens suffering from this disease are listless, half-closed, and sleepy. Sick chickens are afraid of the cold and their bodies are curled up. They especially like to gather at heat sources and their wings droop. Autopsy showed hepatomegaly, the gallbladder was filled with a lot of bile, and gray necrotic nodules were seen on the myocardium, liver, lung and other organs. Sick chickens have diarrhea, discharging white lime-like or green-brown thin feces, which dry on the villi around the cloaca to seal the cloaca, and scream because of pain when defecating.
6. Chickens infected with infectious bursal disease have poor appetite, listlessness, drooping wings, fluffy and dull feathers, and their mouths are often inserted in feathers, so they are afraid of cold and gather at heat sources, showing a weak state. It is characterized by dehydration, skeletal muscle bleeding, urate deposition in renal tubules, large bursa of Fabricius and bleeding from bursa of Fabricius. At the peak of death 3-4 days after onset, the drinking water of sick chickens increased obviously, and diarrhea was pale white or yellow. At the beginning of the disease, you can try Faberling in Dongdong Mall.
7. The growth of chicks infected with reovirus is blocked, the beak, feet and skin are pale, the feathers are messy and irregular, and the tibia and ribs of chicks are deformed. Autopsy showed swelling of glandular stomach, mucosal necrosis, sometimes bleeding point, small intestine filled with gas, diarrhea, yellow, orange or brown mucus discharge. Feces adhere to the anus and paste the anus.
8. Severe anal pecking will cause inflammatory swelling of chicken anus and poor defecation, causing anus to stick together. The feathers of sick chickens are scattered or shed, and the feces often contain bloodshot or sticky blood.
9. Chicken Rush, if it is white feces, mainly consider Salmonella. If it is green feces, consider Escherichia coli or enteritis. You can choose four generations of phosphorus poles and small tsing yi for treatment.