Poultry Diseases in Weather Change | Winter to Summer | Dr. ARSHAD
Mar 5, 2026•Channel
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Video Details
Published4 months ago
Duration10:30
Video IDYza_YLKnJ5c
Languageen
CategoryPets & Animals
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views395
Likes23
Comments11
Engagement Rate8.61%
Likes per 100 views5.82
Comments per 1K views27.85
Description
This Content is About :
Poultry Diseases in Weather Change | Winter to Summer | Dr. ARSHAD
This Content is About :
Winter to Summer Transition | Chicken Diseases with Changing Weather | Remedies for Respiratory illnesses | Dr Arshad
Winter to Summer Transition is a Critical Phase for Chickens due to :
Sudden rise in Temperature
Humidity Fluctuations
Ventilation changes
These factors ultimately weaken immune system of Poultry Birds and cause disease outback.
Prevention and treatment are necessary to avoid loss.
This Video is about Chicken Respiratory Problems by Dr Arshad.
If your chicken has a respiratory illness it is vital to treat it early as recovery is rare without intervention. In addition to this, if you do not treat quickly the illness may spread to the rest of the birds in your flock.
The most common Environmental Triggers include:
Extreme temperatures
Stress
Lack of space / overcrowded conditions
Poor Living Conditions
Signs that your chickens might be suffering from a Respiratory Illness include
Sneezing
Coughing
Wheezing or laboured breathing
Discharge from the nostrils and/or eyes
Swelling around the eyes and/or beak
Poor comb or wattle colour
Decreased appetite
Lethargy
Loss of condition
Reduced egg production
A common misconception is that a coop needs to be airtight to improve heat trapping. In actuality, cracks at the seams along the roof lines allow for a limited exchange of cool air coming in, warming up, absorbing moisture, and then exhausting out of the coop again. Chickens are very efficient at staying warm so long as they are not in direct exposure to a draft. For this reason, windows don’t always allow for the best winter air exchange. If ventilation is lacking, the humidity created by the chickens and their feces will build up on the walls and windows. An ammonia level higher than 25ppm is enough to damage cilia in the airways of chickens, which allows respiratory pathogens to colonize and cause disease.
#WeatherChange
#RespiratoryDiseases
#WinterToSummer
#Transition
#ChickenHealth #PoultryFarming #ChickenFarming #DrArshad #DoctorArshad #ChickenDiseases
Mycoplasma gallisepticum
Aspergillosis
Infectious bronchitis (IB)
Airsacculitis
Fowl cholera
Infectious laryngotracheitis (ILT)
Gapeworm
Infectious Coryza (Avibacterium paragallinarum)
Newcastle disease
Avian Influenza
Avian Metapneumovirus