- Jul 18, 2014
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I just read that vitamin A deficiency can lead to blood spots in the eggs which I've seen in some of my eggs. Anyone have any good ideas on what to give to my chickens to give them extra vitamin A?
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The only true, serviceable, and readily available source of vitamin A is found in animal products. Especially organ meats like liver.
I've read that fish liver oil and fish meal are good sources of vitamin A. http://www.extension.org/pages/67357/feeding-fishmeal-to-poultry#.VZKL-GIpDFo
Depends on where you live. Around my area there is a ton of Poke Weed(Phytolacca Americana) Although it's eaten as shoots. It's generally considered to be poison. The "poison" in poke weed is toxic levels of vitamin A. Simply boiling the plant and using the water from the boil to carefully dose the chicken water would help as a supplement.
I don't know that it is just vitamin A that makes poke toxic. I think it contains other saponins that contribute tto it's toxicity. The problem I see with using it is that at different times of the year the toxicity level of poke varies. Also toxicity of shoots, stems, and leaves varies. Depending on how long you boil it for, the amount of toxin in the water will vary.
Poke weed is one of those plants that you get a wide variety of anecdotal stories about accidental poisonings. I feel it's due to all the different variables surrounding the different ways of preparing it. Poke weed can kill you though so I wouldn't feel comfortable trying to dose my chickens with it, nor recommending others to.
greens have plenty beta carotene. so anything green.
I don't know that it is just vitamin A that makes poke toxic. I think it contains other saponins that contribute tto it's toxicity. The problem I see with using it is that at different times of the year the toxicity level of poke varies. Also toxicity of shoots, stems, and leaves varies. Depending on how long you boil it for, the amount of toxin in the water will vary.
Poke weed is one of those plants that you get a wide variety of anecdotal stories about accidental poisonings. I feel it's due to all the different variables surrounding the different ways of preparing it. Poke weed can kill you though so I wouldn't feel comfortable trying to dose my chickens with it, nor recommending others to.
40% of the world's population lack the gene that convert any beta carotene to vitamin A. The rest only a small percentage. It is very possible to be deficient in vitamin A if you can't convert beta carotene and are not eating eggs or other animal sources of vitamin A in the form of retinol.Yes, that is why I said beta carotene. I do not know what the efficiency (of conversion of beta carotene into retinol) for chicken is. I know for goats and sheep it is close to 100%, for cows is around 25%, and for humans it can be anywhere between 3 and 30%. But it is impossible to have a vitamin A deficiency with a diet rich in greens. One provision is that some fats be ingested, as carotenoids are fat soluble. so plenty of greens, and some sources of fats in the diet, to be eaten concurrently.