"POOP-OLOGY"
By Dr. David J. Kersting, D.V.M.
reprinted courtesy of American Cockateil Society
Understanding your bird’s droppings could save your bird’s life
It is true
that when a bird becomes sick that their health can deteriorate quickly.
But it’s rarely true that when a bird become sick, it dies suddenly without
showing symptoms of illness. The symptoms are there, we just have to learn
how to recognize them.
Changes
in the droppings can be a very early indicator that the bird is sick. Know
what normal droppings look like so you can recognize a change in color,
consistency, odor, and/or amount. Use paper at the bottom of the cage so
that the dropping falls flat and clean onto the paper. This will enable
you to recognize any changes in color, consistency, odor, and/or amount.
If you are able to notice this change you could save your bird’s life.
If you use wood shavings at the bottom of your cage and you miss a change
in color and consistency in the droppings then you failed your bird. It
is wrong to use wood shavings at the bottom of your cage so that it looks
nice and you do not have to clean the bottom of your cage as often if it
interferes with evaluating the droppings for signs of health problems.
There are
three components to most droppings. Urine consists of a crystal urine called
urates (white chalky material) and a non-crystal urine called urine (clear
water). Sometimes the two types of urine are mixed creating a cloudy white
urine. Important changes include color changes and amount.
| Green or Yellow Urates: |
Liver Disease |
|
Anorexia |
| Brown or Chocolate Urates |
Lead Poisoning |
| Red Urine or Urates |
Internal Bleeding |
| Increased Urates |
Dehydration |
| Increased Urine |
Disease |
|
Eating food high in water |
|
Drinking a lot |
The third part of the droppings is the feces which comes from the colon
and consists of digested food. The color varies depending on the types
of food eaten. Red pellets and strawberries produce a red colored dropping.
(This does not apply to the urine.) Seed and green vegetables produce a
green dropping. (This does not apply to the urine.) Blueberries and blackberries
produce black droppings. The feces should be solid and tubular like a worm.
It can be coiled up or uncoiled and it is okay if it is broken into pieces.
Diarrhea
is not excessive urine in the droppings. Diarrhea is the fecal material
not holding its tubular shape. Instead it is the consistency of pudding.
Look for blood in the feces. If the feces is fresh and black in color and
there were no blueberries in the diet then this indicates melena. Melena
is black droppings caused by bleeding high up in the digestive system.
When the blood passes through the lower digestive system, it is digested
turning the red blood into a black tarry color, staining the feces black.
Color which
cannot be explained by the diet should be investigated by your veterinarian.
Don’t forget to look for real worms like tapeworms and roundworms.
If you
notice black droppings (indicating internal bleeding) at the bottom of
your bird’s cage, stop and go to your veterinarian. If you wait until the
bird is weak, not eating, and fluffed up, then you have a race against
the clock to save the bird’s life.
Watch your
bird’s droppings everyday and learn what they look like normally. When
you notice a change, identify what portion of the dropping has changed.
If you cannot explain the change by the bird’s lifestyle then act immediately
and contact your avian veterinarian.
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