I got into raising rabbits last year, and I wanted top quality show stock to breed. I bought my first trio from the #1 breeder in the state. She told me if there were any runny noses to not call the vet and just call her...
Well less than a month in, the buck started sneezing and having a runny nose. She said it's bordetella and give him antibiotics. I did. His runny nose stopped but he wouldn't eat. I gave probiotics too. He barely ate. Even though I quarantined him it wasn't fast enough. A new buck I purchased and had kept in quarantine came in contact with the droppings and then he got sick too. The breeder I got him from is a friend and has no sick animals.
The new buck had snot but seemed fine in general. I was very attached and took him to the vet. 2+ weeks of baytril 2x a day and he was fine. However the first buck was wasting away and I culled the original buck.
I kept my new buck in quarantine for 2 months away from the rabbits (of which there were now 30 with moms and kits). He was in great condition, beautiful coat, good body, no sneezing for 2 months. I reintroduced him to the barn, and he sneezed the very first day he was in there. I removed him right away.
It's been about 3 weeks and almost the whole barn has sneezed - mostly 6-8 wk old kits. I treated everyone that sneezed with antibiotics for 10 days and only 1 kit is still sneezing, but in excellent condition, biggest kit of all the litters.
Today I saw one of the breeding does sneeze and she has newborn kits.
Here's my questions:
1. Does bordetella cause runny noses with no loss in weight/conditioning?
2. Do you think the breeder knowingly sold me a sick rabbit for top dollar? Turns out a friend got rabbits from this breeder too, and the buck had a runny nose the day she bought it...
I'm not sure if this is pasturella or bordetella or what, but I obviously can't sell kits that are sick with something and this is affecting my business because I'm having to turn down sales calls to my rabbitry that I've worked very hard to promote. Any advice besides burning the barn down would be appreciated. As mentioned the affected rabbits look and act great, just have a wet nose and sneeze.
Thank you!!
Well less than a month in, the buck started sneezing and having a runny nose. She said it's bordetella and give him antibiotics. I did. His runny nose stopped but he wouldn't eat. I gave probiotics too. He barely ate. Even though I quarantined him it wasn't fast enough. A new buck I purchased and had kept in quarantine came in contact with the droppings and then he got sick too. The breeder I got him from is a friend and has no sick animals.
The new buck had snot but seemed fine in general. I was very attached and took him to the vet. 2+ weeks of baytril 2x a day and he was fine. However the first buck was wasting away and I culled the original buck.
I kept my new buck in quarantine for 2 months away from the rabbits (of which there were now 30 with moms and kits). He was in great condition, beautiful coat, good body, no sneezing for 2 months. I reintroduced him to the barn, and he sneezed the very first day he was in there. I removed him right away.
It's been about 3 weeks and almost the whole barn has sneezed - mostly 6-8 wk old kits. I treated everyone that sneezed with antibiotics for 10 days and only 1 kit is still sneezing, but in excellent condition, biggest kit of all the litters.
Today I saw one of the breeding does sneeze and she has newborn kits.
Here's my questions:
1. Does bordetella cause runny noses with no loss in weight/conditioning?
2. Do you think the breeder knowingly sold me a sick rabbit for top dollar? Turns out a friend got rabbits from this breeder too, and the buck had a runny nose the day she bought it...
I'm not sure if this is pasturella or bordetella or what, but I obviously can't sell kits that are sick with something and this is affecting my business because I'm having to turn down sales calls to my rabbitry that I've worked very hard to promote. Any advice besides burning the barn down would be appreciated. As mentioned the affected rabbits look and act great, just have a wet nose and sneeze.
Thank you!!