Will eating ferns hurt chicks

nova022

Songster
8 Years
Aug 3, 2012
1,709
173
227
Hi, I have seven week old chicks who love to eat my emerald ferns, (they look like a boston fern). Does anyone know if they are harmful for them to eat. Also wisteria leaves seem to be a favorite of one of the pullets. Thanks for any help.
 
i know that bracken ferns have cyanide in them and they also have many other lethal poisons and toxins, so defiantly DON"T give Bracken to chickens or any animal really. I am not really sure if Emerald (asparagus fern) is poisonous to chickens though. But do you know any other ferns that are poisonous to chickens because i have heaps of ferns here and i am not sure if i can give them to my hens, and i don't know if there poisonous or what kind/type they are?
 
I'm not 100% if it's the fern I'm thinking off. It makes little red berries? Those berries are poisonous.
 
kimberly_fern_03.png


This is the fern I am wondering about. My yard is full of them. I am trying to google them and so far I haven't found anything that says one way or the other. Does anyone know if they are harmful to chickens? Thanks
 
Well, I found the answer to my question

Toxic to animals: The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) Animal Poison Control Center has determined that asparagus fern, emerald fern, emerald feather, lace fern, and plumosa fern “have been reported as having systemic effects on animals and/or intense effects on the gastrointestinal tract.” —ASPCA

That leads me to my next question. As I said my yard is full of them. Will the chickens know not to eat them when they free range? They do seem attracted to the ones that grow close to their run that they can sometimes pull through the wire. I will certainly move those today.
 
kimberly_fern_03.png


This is the fern I am wondering about. My yard is full of them. I am trying to google them and so far I haven't found anything that says one way or the other. Does anyone know if they are harmful to chickens? Thanks

yes these are the ones that i am talking about we have so many in our garden, i am also trying to find out if there poisonous but cant find anything. i My hens some leafs from this fern and they were fine but i am still not sure.
 
Well, I found the answer to my question

Toxic to animals: The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) Animal Poison Control Center has determined that asparagus fern, emerald fern, emerald feather, lace fern, and plumosa fern “have been reported as having systemic effects on animals and/or intense effects on the gastrointestinal tract.” —ASPCA

That leads me to my next question. As I said my yard is full of them. Will the chickens know not to eat them when they free range? They do seem attracted to the ones that grow close to their run that they can sometimes pull through the wire. I will certainly move those today.

chickens will eat anything really but if you have plenty of grass and better things to eat then they will eat that. They would only eat the emerald fern if it was the last thing in the garden.
 
chickens will eat anything really but if you have plenty of grass and better things to eat then they will eat that. They would only eat the emerald fern if it was the last thing in the garden.
That is a relief. I have lots of other good things for them to eat and planted collards and turnips so they can have greens over the winter. Thanks for the info.
 
Well, I found the answer to my question

Toxic to animals: The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) Animal Poison Control Center has determined that asparagus fern, emerald fern, emerald feather, lace fern, and plumosa fern “have been reported as having systemic effects on animals and/or intense effects on the gastrointestinal tract.” —ASPCA

That leads me to my next question. As I said my yard is full of them. Will the chickens know not to eat them when they free range? They do seem attracted to the ones that grow close to their run that they can sometimes pull through the wire. I will certainly move those today.

None of these are true ferns but are forms of asparagus, except potentially the lace fern. But I'm assuming the ASPCA is referring to something like Asparagus setaceus as opposed to Microlepia strigosa when they mention lace fern. I'll look around the ASPCA website sometime and see if maybe they have something listing the scientific names.
Asparagus, emerald, emerald feather and plumosa ferns are definitely asparagus. I wonder about true ferns...

I'm a big fan of ferns an was wondering this myself. Did your ferns ever end up proving harmful to your chicks?

Wikipedia has an interesting article listing a few species of ferns used for human consumption, "fiddlehead greens".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiddlehead_fern
 
None of these are true ferns but are forms of asparagus, except potentially the lace fern. But I'm assuming the ASPCA is referring to something like Asparagus setaceus as opposed to Microlepia strigosa when they mention lace fern. I'll look around the ASPCA website sometime and see if maybe they have something listing the scientific names.
Asparagus, emerald, emerald feather and plumosa ferns are definitely asparagus. I wonder about true ferns...

I'm a big fan of ferns an was wondering this myself. Did your ferns ever end up proving harmful to your chicks?

Wikipedia has an interesting article listing a few species of ferns used for human consumption, "fiddlehead greens".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiddlehead_fern
The fern that the op was referring to back 3 years ago is a Nephrolepis Obliterata.
The "emerald fern" the aspca named is one of the many names for the Asparagus Setaceus.
Also the, "lace fern" that the aspca named is the Asparagus Setaceus not the true lace fern Microlepia strigosa.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom