Pinoy Bird Lovers


.
 
HomeHome  PortalPortal  Latest imagesLatest images  RegisterRegister  Log in  
Affiliates
BygAfricans
Chiebap
www.brieo.com
November 2024
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
CalendarCalendar
Daily Read
The chick dies in the egg

One of the most common problems with breeding lovebirds is that chick die in the egg. One of the reasons for this may be the combination of humidity and surrounding temperature. It is ideal to have a humidity of 60 to 65% and a surrounding temperature of at least 18° C. If the surrounding air is quite dry and the temperature is high, you should offer the birds constant supply of bathing water. You can also regularly offer them fresh twigs, as they ensure more humidity in the nesting box. Be careful, however, as high humidity (more than 70%) combined with low surrounding temperature is just as lethal as an environment that is too dry. High humidity and high temperature are no problem, but too cold and too wet is definitely fatal!

There are, of course, other reasons why chicks die in the egg. Insufficient nutrition may also be a cause, as this results in young that are too week to develop properly or hatch. You can prevent this by only breeding with birds that are older than a year and by making sure that the breeding birds are in optimal condition. This condition has to built up slowly and the basis is to always use good feeding.

Some mutations can also be so weak that the young die in the egg. It is important that you always work with non-related birds and that you always cross ‘weak’ mutations with an independent strong wild form first and then carry on breeding with the descendants. In this case you prevent combinations of mutant x mutant. Never let the birds breed more often than twice in a row. A good pair definitely deserves a break after raising two batches of young, so that they can regain their strength for the next breeding season.

Finally, lack of sunlight can also be a cause why the young aren’t hatching. The birds’ bodies produce vitamin D under the influence of ultraviolet light (UV rays). If there is no sunlight, the reserves of vitamin D might be used up. The consequence is that the percentage of chicks hatching decreases. You can prevent this bay adapting a lighting. You can buy neon-tubes which imitate ‘daylight’ (thus also ultraviolet light). In addition, you can feed your birds a supplement of vitamin A, D3, and E in a ration of 50:25:20 on a weekly basis. These supplements are widely available at pharmacies or chemists’. Be careful and only feed these supplements once a week, as too much can be harmful

View unanswered posts
 

Classifieds

 
TopicsPosts
Last Posts
No new posts

Tindahan ng Ibon

33dilute bc atbp.....
Mon 23 May 2011, 22:18
kaboom_aviary View latest post
No new posts

Sari-Saring Tinda

Electronic items.... etc
23dave's vitamins ...
Wed 20 Apr 2011, 22:57
dave View latest post
Classifieds Empty
Recently shared images
Today's active topics
Today's top 20 posters
Overall top 20 posters
Delete the forum cookies
Who is online?
Who is online?Our users have posted a total of 100 messages
We have 83 registered users
The newest registered user is mannyballada
In total there is 1 user online :: 0 Registered, 0 Hidden and 1 Guest
Most users ever online was 71 on Thu 26 Sep 2024, 16:13

Registered Users: None
No users have a birthday today
No users are having a birthday in the upcoming 7 days
Legend : [ Red Plates ][ Green Plates ][ Pink Plates ]

New postsNew postsNo new postsNo new posts  Forum is lockedForum is locked