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Western Canada Poultry Swap
Forum dedicated to the buying and selling of quality heritage poultry in Western Canada.
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Breeding for resistance does not mean you let them become sick, then recover. That would just be setting up yourself for a very weak, immuno-compromised flock. Resistance means they DO NOT get sick because of their strong immune systems.
Briarwood, those 3 chicks that died last year were vaccinated, as well as the 4th? That does not sound like very good results. I do know the vaccine is not 100%, but I would not expect to lose 4 vaccinated chicks.BriarwoodPoultry wrote:This is a great thread to give information and alternatives to vaccinating for Marek's. I don't like to over vaccinate, however I did vaccinate about half of my chicks this year.
coopslave wrote:Here is a quote from the thread that FlickerChick posted a link to. This is pretty much how I feel about it too.
Breeding for resistance does not mean you let them become sick, then recover. That would just be setting up yourself for a very weak, immuno-compromised flock. Resistance means they DO NOT get sick because of their strong immune systems.
I prefer to use birds that never even get sick to begin with. I personally don`t keep anything that gets sick either. Just my personal choice.
ipf wrote:There are a number of different vaccines developed over the years, from the earliest one, made from the related turkey herpes virus, to the most recent, widely effective, GMO one. This are many different strains of Marek's disease, too, and some of these are resistant to the turkey-herpes vaccine, so a vaccinated bird might come in contact with a more virulent strain.
It's also well documented that the vaccine sometimes just doesn't "take" on individual birds, so a vaccinated bird could still contract a strain that the vaccine should be effective against.
ipf wrote:I think, but am not certain, that exposure to one strain of Mareks stimulates immunity to other strains. I'd love to know if anyone knows more about this? If this is true, then exposing your flock deliberately to a mild strain will protect your birds from more virulent strains. I'm virtually certain that I have a mild strain in my flock; I've lost a few birds, but very few.
ipf wrote:No, the vaccines aren't targetted to individual strains on a yearly basis; Marek's isn't like the flu virus where one strain dominates in a given year.
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