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Farm Sustainability Dashboard

The Farm Sustainability Dashboard has been designed to improve industry best practice and meet evolving community expectations. It has been created for business owners and is appropriate for farms of all sizes.

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Biosecurity for the backyard chook

Biosecurity for the backyard chook

Backyard hen

With recent media interest in keeping backyard poultry, Australian Eggs is reminding consumers to be aware of the animal and human health risks associated and are encouraging biosecurity education for all.  

Australian Eggs’ Managing Director, Rowan McMonnies, said backyard poultry keeping presents risks to animal and human health and backyard owners need to understand the responsibilities.

“Anecdotally, there has been an increase in the number of people keeping backyard hens and egg farmers understand the attraction to producing nutritious and delicious eggs,” Mr McMonnies said.

“People need to realise that once you’re a suburban ‘egg farmer’ there are important biosecurity risks to protect against.

“Diseases spread quickly and widely and potential transfer from backyard to commercial flocks can put food security for the broader community at risk.

“It’s understandable that people think backyard farming is clean and natural but these set-ups can pose significant problems because of how accessible they are to wild animals.

Below, Australian Eggs has issued a list of 10 things backyard poultry owners should practice to reduce biosecurity risks:

  1. Always wash hands after handling chickens or eggs.
  2. Keep chickens away from ponds and rivers as water birds are known carriers of avian influenza.
  3. Ensure that wild birds cannot access the chickens’ feed or water. Diseases can be easily transmitted to poultry by contamination of feed or water.
  4. Keep other animals like domestic geese or turkeys, and even cats and dogs, well away as they can bring disease to chickens.
  5. Use safe water sources such as town water, good quality bore water or sanitised surface water for chickens to drink.
  6. Provide a secure rodent-proof enclosure for poultry as rats and mice are known carriers of disease.
  7. Any kitchen scraps fed to chickens must be meat and animal free. When spoiled, these may carry dangerous bacteria.
  8. Check hens regularly for anything unusual such as coughing, diarrhoea or swollen eyes.
  9. If a chicken is showing signs of sickness, isolate the sick animal from others and seek veterinary advice in a timely manner.
  10. Call Animal Health Australia’s 24-hour emergency animal disease watch hotline on 1800 675 888 if there are unusual symptoms or signs of serious disease.


Australian Eggs has also produced a how-to guide for backyard egg production.  To view and download the guide, CLICK HERE.

ENDS

Media enquiries
Kelly Seagrave, Industry Communications Advisor at Australian Eggs on (02) 9409 6901 or [E-Mail not displayed]

Want to see what an egg farm looks like? Take this interactive 360 degree tour to see how eggs are produced in Australia.

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