How A Constant Flow Water Supply For Chickens Guards Against Dehydration

By Stella Gay


Poultry is one of the most common sources of protein in the population's diet. Every year, millions of chickens are slaughtered. The meat is versatile and can be used in several different applications. Chicken farming therefore takes place on a mass scale. Large installations housing thousands of chickens need a reliable water supply, and a constant flow water supply for chickens is one such piece of equipment.

Constant flow systems have a storage tank with the drinking pipes attached to its underside. The pipes have nipples on their ends, positioned strategically inside the coop, which the chickens can activate with their bills. There is therefore no human (i. E. Worker) element in the operation of the system, besides refilling the tank or cleaning it. However, there are important points to take note of.

It is much easier for a chicken to die of dehydration than a person, particularly where they are exposed to the sun. In unbroken sunshine, the chicken can die in mere hours. Its body mass is tiny compared to a person's, perhaps not even 5lb (2.5kg). Temperature changes are more severe to it, so what a person experiences as minor is potentially lethal to the bird. Sudden shifts in temperature can cause the bird to experience stress. Stress is a known killer among farm animals.

Electrolyte deficiency is a problem related to dehydration. It also affects people. Electrolytic nutrients are usually those in salts, such as table salt or the mineral salts in other compounds. Typical elements are sodium and potassium, which are essential to the nervous system. People lose them by sweating or urinating. Any animal with muscles and nerves needs these electrolytes.

Symptoms of chicken dehydration are simple to observe and become more severe as the condition becomes worse. Its initial stage is characterized by paleness in the head or face. This is not necessarily dehydration - it may be some other illness. But if it develops into difficulty in breathing, it is more likely to be the former.

Without intervention, the chicken starts to exhibit diarrhea. This is a more obvious symptom and should be investigated. But it might also be caused by another illness. The latter may then be causing dehydration. This is easily possible because digestive infections usually result in a loss of water. The dehydration is therefore not necessarily the primary issue, but merely a symptom of something else.

The most serious stage of dehydration is convulsions, where birds experience fits or become limp and immobile intermittently. This is the condition's final stage and it is extremely hard to save birds from death if this occurs. The fits are characterized by useless kicking with the feet and jaundice-like straining of the neck.

In order to save them, interventions can be made at any phase of the dehydration, but should be commenced immediately. The birds need manual and individual attention initially. When they start to drink on their own, all that is needed is an unbroken water supply. You can also moisten their feed. Electrolyte supplements are available on the market to address the issue of restoring their metabolism.




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