Cotoneaster lacteous is not harmful to horses. The majority of the cotoneaster species are in the form of shrubs and bushes.
Whatever dosage the VETERINARIAN said to use.
Speaking for common small-flock management...not sure what the large-scale operation practice is. Layer chicks are often raised on medicated chick starter, the relevant ingredient of which is amprolium, which is to prevent coccidiosis. (Amprolium is an analog for Vitamin B1 and is not an organism, itself.) The amprolium keeps the coccidiosis microbe at bay in the chicks' bodies until, at eight or nine weeks, the chicks have developed a resistance to coccidiosis from low-level environmental exposure to it, and do not need the amprolium any more, so are switched to unmedicated feed. Hens typically don't start laying until twenty weeks of age, so there is no reason why a laying hen would be eating amprolium-medicated feed any more, anyhow.
depends what it is
Chestnut applies to horses in two ways; one is the color, which is reddish brown. Another is the bony protrusion from above the horses knee in the front, and from the inner hock on the back. This is in no way harmful to horses, it is present on all horses.
Amprolium HCl is used to treat coccidiosis of laying hens, growing chickens, turkey, cattle's and different other farm animals, also used as assistance treatment drugs to prevent and control the coccidiosis' spread. Amprolium Hydrochloride is traditional coccidiostatic, and it's used in poultry feed to control coccidiosis. Amprolium Hydrochloride is very good against the hemorrhage-producing coccidia E. tenella and E. necatrix and it has some activity against E. maxima, amprolium hydrochloride is one of the most safety anti-coccidial drugs and be approved by FDA.
Amprolium is not an organism, so is not an antibiotic in the sense I think you mean. It is an analog of Vitamin B1, and works by preventing the uptake of thiamine (B1) by the organism which causes coccidiosis. Amprolium makes the creature's body an environment hostile to the development of coccidiosis, without actually attacking the coccidiosis organism. It's like a placebo food for the coccidiosis microbe, which gets no nourishment from it. To some degree amprolium also reduces the uptake of thiamine in the creature who is eating amprolium in its feed, so it is only administered until the young chickens are old enough to have built up an immunity to coccidiosis, from low-level environmental exposure to it. Then they are switched to unmedicated feed. (This is fairly common for management of small poultry flocks; I can't speak about the management of large-scale operations.) Using amprolium does not contribute to drug-resistant microbes.
No they are not.a matter afact horses love bananas there quite healthy.
Im not quite sure but for now dont feed them to your horses! Untill then ask your vet.
chicken poop is very harmful to horse because if they eat it they could get a fices disease.
Horses are harmful to humans because they can bite, rear, buck, strike, kick at you. They are useful for Plowing, Farm work, races, leisure riding, companions and just for a pet. =]
Yes. It can kill horses. If you see signs that you may think are colic, then call your vet immediatley.