Growel Agrovet Private Limited specialises in developing, manufacturing, exporting, and marketing premium quality animal healthcare products and veterinary medicines for livestock and poultry. Our product range is designed to ensure the optimum healt...
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April 11, 2015
Biosecurity in poultry and farm hygiene practices are implemented at breeders ,broiler & layer farms to reduce the risk of disease agents moving on to farms from outside sources the movement of disease agents between sheds on the same farm, carry over of disease agents from one batch to the next in the shed environment, and carry over of disease agents from breeding flocks to their progeny via the eggs. Farmers take a range of precautions to prevent entry of diseases into breeders ,broiler & layer farms.
Let us have a look of cause and solution for biosecurity in poultry farming .
Contaminated People :
People who visit your poultry farm and enter the production area (including sheds and free-range areas) can potentially be carriers of disease and food safety pathogens that may threaten the health and productivity of your flock.
Diseases or food safety pathogens may be carried through visitors at the farms through the following objects:
Visitors can include neighbours, contractors, suppliers, vets, delivery drivers maintenance and service personnel.
To reduce biosecurity in poultry risks from visitors you should:
Showering before entry and changing into freshly laundered clothes and farm boots, and then showering out, is the highest level of protection for poultry production facilities. If visitors have had recent contact with other poultry, this option should be used.
Contaminated Vehicles & Equipment:
Vehicles and equipment are a high risk for spreading pathogens, to reduce this risk:
Wild Birds:
Wild birds and waterfowl can be carriers of diseases and food safety pathogens, such as avian influenza and salmonella. Keeping a poultry farm free of wild birds may be difficult.
To make the property unattractive to wild birds:
Feral Animals, Insects, Vermin, Domestic Livestock & Animals :
Insects, such as darkling beetles, and rodents can be carriers of infectious diseases and food safety pathogens such as campylobacter and salmonella.
In all poultry farms, it is important to:
Do Not:
Other Poultry:
New birds are the most common way to introduce disease into your flock. To reduce disease coming in with new birds you can take the following measures.
Feed and Water for Poultry :
Feed and water can also be a source of contamination. Disease carrying rodents or wild birds may contaminate feed, while droppings and excretions from wild birds or waterfowl may be the source of contamination for open water sources such as dam, tank and river water.
Any water used for drinking, shed cooling and range irrigation on a poultry farm must meet the microbiological standards Always use drinking water treated with Aquacure.
To reduce biosecurity risks associated with feed and water contamination:
Litter Management :
Litter can introduce food safety and disease pathogens onto a property. In particular, wet litter can encourage the growth of food safety pathogens. To reduce the risk of litter being a source of disease:
Air Quality :
Having a good buffer distance between other poultry farms and piggeries will help to reduce any impact from airborne spread of disease. The minimum distance should be at least 1 km. between other poultry farms and at least 5 km from breeder farms. Planting non-bird attracting trees and shrubs as strategic windbreaks can also act as a barrier.
Biosecurity in poultry farming is critical to the future of the poultry industry. While there are vaccines and antibiotics to assist, it will be necessary to prevent and eliminate disease agents if the poultry industry is to prosper. Biosecurity will determine the success or failure of the industry in the region. Thus, it must be fully understood and strictly implemented. Biosecurity is simply a plan to prevent the entry of a disease agent onto a farm and spread among farms. Mostly this is common sense, but a basic understanding of how diseases enter a farm, persist in farm and are disseminated needs to be understood so control can be approached scientifically. Biosecurity in poultry must be approached from a country wide perspective to be truly effective.