Abstract
Fifteen outbreaks of rickets were diagnosed in turkey poults in Saskatchewan [Canada] between 1978 and 1981. No relationship to farm, source of poults, or source of feed was apparent. Most outbreaks started when the poults were between 10 and 14 days of age, and they had recovered by 28 days of age. Losses varied from 1-14% of poults started. Skeletal lesions were characteristic of a vitamin D or Ca deficiency. On the basis of chemical analyses, adequate levels of Ca and P and proper amounts of vitamin premixes were present in the feed, but in 5 outbreaks biological feed tests implicated feed as a causative factor. The severity of rickets in poults fed defective feeds was markedly reduced by providing the poults with extra vitamin D in the drinking H2O or by injection. Two premixes used in different feeds contained adequate available vitamin D on the basis of biological testing. In some of the outbreaks, the rickets may have resulted from inadequate distribution of vitamin D in the feed, destruction of vitamin D during feed processing, or some unknown factor in the feed interfering with vitamin D utilization.