Poultry flocks are susceptible to a wide range of diseases caused
by various infectious microbes including bacteria, viruses and
mycoplasmas. Vaccination of chicks continues to play an important
role in poultry protection especially for diseases such as
Newcastle disease and infectious bronchitis.
Micron supply poultry producers world-wide with vaccine delivery
systems based on their electrically powered hand-held sprayers.
Combining rotary atomisation for the precise production of small,
evenly-sized droplets and a fan to distribute these droplets over
the chicks, they facilitate the application of controlled dosages
in very small total liquid volumes which is essential for the
efficient use of vaccines which are both potent and expensive. The
sprayers also offer the opportunity to deliver the vaccine to the
entire flock in one go thus ensuring complete protection with the
minimum of fuss and disruption.
Micron can offer poultry producers their electrically powered
UlvaVac (battery operated - marketed through Merial) or Turbair
sprayers (the mains powered Electrafan 110/240 or the battery
operated Electrafan 12), with choice of sprayer depending on the
availability and distribution of power points in the poultry house.
Benefits common to all three are the ability to produce droplets
sufficiently small to carry the vaccine into the bird's neck, but
not so small that they enter in the lungs - minimising any risk of
adverse reaction.
Furthermore these machines are able, through their efficient
droplet production, to exert maximum control over not only the
dosage applied but its accurate targetting on the birds with
minimum wastage. All birds receive a similar dose of vaccine when
adminstered by this method, as compared with the technique of
including vaccine in the drinking water where the dose received is
dependent on the amount of water imbibed and can result in over and
under-dosing of individual birds. Being electrically powered they
offer a quiet, efficient and unobtrusive method of rapidly
vaccinating the entire flock effectively and uniformly. In the UK,
poultry farmers have been applying vaccines in this way for a
considerable time and producers use both the UlvaVac and Turbair
sprayers.
All three sprayers can also be used for the application of
insecticides for the control of flies within poultry houses thus
further helping to manage other diseases such as Salmonellosis
spread by Musea domestica (the common housefly) and other related
species.