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Why quarantine is so important with new Birds!

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« on: May 24, 2014, 03:39:49 pm »


    Here is a very good article on why it is so important to quarantine a new addition to your flock!



    Quarantine! (by Tracy Bockenhauer)
    Bringing home a new parrot? Make sure it's healthy. The lives of the birds you already own could depend on it.

    IN 1995, WE WENT from a zero-parrot family to one with four “feathered kids”. First came the parakeets from Petco, Petey and Paulie. They were so much fun, we decided to get a bigger, “talking” parrot, a Quaker we named Carlos. Before the year was out we had added Charlie, a Congo African grey.

    Before each purchase, I read everything I could get my hands on about the species, so we would be prepared to take good care of our new bird. It never occurred to me that by failing to quarantine each new family member, we were playing Russian roulette with the health of the birds we already had.

    Why quarantine?
    Quarantining means keeping a new bird completely separate from others for at least six weeks, during which time you should be able to decide whether it’s healthy.

    Parrots can carry any one of eleven types of infectious viruses, some deadly to other birds.

    Practicing quarantine correctly can be a hassle, to be sure. But it’s well worth the inconvenience when you consider the possible consequences of failing to do so.

    Unlike dogs and cats, parrots are capable of carrying any one of up to 11 types of infectious viruses. It doesn’t matter if your new parrot looks and acts healthy. Many avian diseases lie dormant until activated by stressful situations, such as going to a new home.

    While we humans only have to worry about catching chlamydiosis (more commonly known as psittacosis or parrot fever), a flu-like illness that responds to antibiotics, the family parrot can easily contract an incurable disease from a newcomer to the household.

    Never introduce your parrots at home to a new bird until you know it's healthy.

    During my seven years as a parrot rehabilitator, I’ve cared for a lot of sick birds. About 15 percent of the 170 parrots I’ve found new homes for have arrived at LARRA ill.

    Some of these birds have carried devastating diseases. The polyoma virus and psittacine beak and feather disease (PBFD) destroy the feathers and eventually kill their victims through secondary bacterial and fungal infections.

    Proventricular dilatation disease (PDD) is a fatal wasting illness that may also cause seizures and motor problems. There is no treatment or vaccine for PDD.

    Pacheo's disease is a highly virulent form of the herpes virus that often kills Amazons.

    All of these diseases are spread through the air and many, including Pacheo’s and polyoma, can hide undetected until it’s too late to protect your other parrots.

    Even the more manageable chlamydiosis can go undetected until the condition becomes serious; only a faecal or blood test can diagnose it.

    By carefully following quarantining procedures, I haven’t experienced a single incident of contamination.

    The price of carelessness
    People who don’t screen aren’t as fortunate. Some folks add a new bird only to have it die later as a result of hidden illness.

    Their other birds continue to appear well, but every day these owners have to worry that a dreaded disease will rear its ugly head again.

    At the very least, you may be setting yourself up for expenses you could have avoided.

    A friend who once added a Moluccan cockatoo to her household without taking any precautions later discovered it had chlamydiosis.

    She wound up spending $500 to treat the newcomer and all four of her other birds, including a Goffin’s cockatoo, an orange-winged Amazon, a Quaker and a cockatiel.

    Chain-store parrots are the most likely to be ill. Birds from a one-parrot family are probably healthy.

    You might get lucky, like we did with our four parrots. All turned out to be healthy. But why risk suffering the anguish of knowing you allowed a beloved pet to contract a chronic or fatal disease?

    By quarantining, you can greatly reduce if not entirely eliminate the health risks of adding a new bird to your avian family.

    First: a trip to the Vet
    Not all new parrots present the same risk to your birds at home. Birds from chain pet stores are among the most likely to be ill. On the other hand, a parrot that was the only bird in a previous home for several years is probably healthy.

    Birds that come from a rescue organization that practices good quarantining should also be okay. Ask for vet records.

    LARRA takes detailed histories and consults with a vet on all incoming birds. We observe strict quarantining practices before releasing a newcomer to the mix. However, if the bird has a low-risk background, we often skip the medical exam.

    If your new parrot seems well and comes from a “safe” environment in which it has not recently been exposed to strange birds, then you, too, may be able to get by without seeing a vet.

    However, I always advise new owners to get a “well-bird” baseline exam no matter where they got their bird. You’ll have your new parrot for a long time and you want to start off on the right foot. Moreover, the best time to establish a relationship with a vet is when your bird is healthy.

    Make an appointment with an avian vet for the day you pick up your new member of the family. That way you can take him straight to an exam before bringing him home. Reputable pet stores and breeders will allow you to bring an ill bird back for a refund if the vet finds anything wrong.

    A well-bird exam should cost $100 or less for the physical inspection, a fecal smear and a standard blood panel. Expect to pay more if your new bird is ill and requires further tests or medication. You should get test results within a week.

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« Reply #1 on: May 25, 2014, 06:50:53 am »

A true quarantine in your average household is nearly impossible BUT some extra cautionary husbandry goes A LONG WAY. a true quarantine would give the new parrot his own air supply. well we all know, that's probably not going to happen. but here are a few things you can do to reduce the possibility of transmitting any diseases:

1. keep the new bird in a different room than your flock. this not only gives you time to see if he's healthy but gives him time to get to know the household without having a bunch of strange birds all in his personal bubble.  dmblaf

2. put a GOOD hepa air purifier in that room.

3. wash your hands thoroughly between rooms. both going into and going out of. if you have any doubts about the bird's health then changing clothes between holding the new bird and holding your current flock wouldnt hurt.

4. wash food bowls and utensils thoroughly and use an antibacterial cleanser. F-10 is very good and the only cleaner that i know of that can kill PBFD on surfaces.

 bugeye i have no idea where she found her vet, but her estimated cost for a well bird exam would BARELY cover the office visit fees here in Florida. i spent about $350 on caleb's well visit.

now lemme tell you a couple stories, true stories....

back in 2010, i added my last bird to my flock and thought i was done. but after one thing and another, i added my cockatoo in jan of 2012. i put him in his own bedroom but lets be honest, the air supply system made a true quarantine almost impossible. cockatoos are dusty and his dust did get outside that room. i got lazy and didnt always wash my hands between interacting with the old and new. so about a month after i got my cockatoo, who turned out to be a plucker, barberer, self mutilator, but i anyway, i took him to the vet. after she did her first cursory exam she expressed some concern that he may have PBFD  bugeye  i nearly fainted! had i doomed my entire flock to a horrible death because i was too lazy to wash my hands??  :deer:  i spent a week in terror wondering and waiting for the tests to come back. you can read the play by play of this story right here at BP if you look hard enough. i was lucky. his test came back negative. but i learned my lesson. never again! i'm SO very for quarantine. 

story number two isnt truly mine, it belongs to grey, a member here. i'll make it short. He is very involved in conservation breeding of rare amazons. he also has a couple caiques and a sun conure.  he adopted a poor Scarlet Macaw named Scarlet. Discovery after horrible discovery for this poor blind girl finally led to a dangerous disease, its listed in the above article and is deadly to amazons.... and caiques. if he hadnt been following STRICT quarantine procedures he may very well have lost his ENTIRE flock. he would not have been lucky. you can see the play by play on Scarlet's story here in BP as well.

dont gamble. quarantine.
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« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2014, 07:06:27 am »

Thank you for adding to this Beth and sharing your own personal story with us!
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Codie, Yellow Crowned Amazon
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