SpinyFranky
New Member
Most doctors I have dealt with (and even vets) say to give the pill with something tasty so that the child/animal can swallow it easier or swallow it without knowing that it was swallowed.
You said..."while extensive research has not been done to prove that probiotics in yogurt will have an affect on birds, neither has research been done to disprove it"....while this is not from a scientific study, there are an awful lot of sites that say that the probiotic needs to be the right one for the creature involved, including big breeders...so there must be some reason why so many say it...
"What some people do not realize is that not only must a probiotic for birds be alive to effectively work; it also must be comprised of avian-specific bacteria"...
http://www.audreysaviary.com/gpage.html2.html
"Most probiotics are species specific"...
http://www.freewebs.com/englishtrumpeter/superiorbreeders.htm
"However, the microflora of the intestinal tract of the dog and cat differ from those found in people and probiotic organisms appear to be species specific"....
http://pet-nutrition.suite101.com/article.cfm/probiotics_to_treat_diarrhea_in_dogs_and_cats
You said..."our immune system is much more advanced and complex than say a chameleons"...could you please show me something that proves this? I'd love to read about it.
And could you show me some proof of this too..."Where as I would assume chameleon probiotics are mainly in the form of digestive additives to not only break down protein chains, but also aid in their movement towards the stomach lining, Human probiotics fight off pathogens, bacteria, disease, and more."
http://www.keratin.com/am/am007.shtml - It speaks mainly about fish and amphibians - however amphibians are the direct predecessor to reptiles, which precede birds, which precede mammals, which eventually ends with the human species.
from that Link:
"For our purposes we could expect that the vertebrate immune system should develop from the rudimentary in fish to the most complex in ourselves."
"So far, researchers have only identified around 25 types of antigens that fish antibodies will bind to. The human antibody repertoire is able to collectively target thousands of antigens."
"Amphibians have a somewhat improved ability to mount a response to foreign antigens but it is still very limited. Having three different classes of antibody, IgM, IgX and IgY does help improve their chances of defense against infection but it is clear that amphibians have a significant problem mount an antibody response against what are called "thymus dependant antigens". This type of antigen needs to be destroyed by the combined efforts of antibodies and lymphocytes. Although part of the problem is that amphibians have a limited number of T cells, the main problem is a limited antibody repertoire. Most thymus dependant antigens are viral antigens, so amphibians are more susceptible to viral infections than humans."
To answer the second question you asked, as stated in the post itself, I said it was an assumption - and that assumption was made off of information inferred from the link provided. In no way did I claim it to be 100% true or fact.
And for probiotics, until someone publishes something that directly proves there is a definitive yes or no answer to which are used and which are not used according to species, as well as if or if not yogurt is a good source of said probiotics - I will continue to follow my belief system and provide yogurt primarily because they like it, secondly because its a decent source of calcium, and thirdly because POTENTIALLY it could benefit them with pro biotics. These three points justifies its use in my mind, and thats the only mind I really care about.
As for the case of reptiles, specifically dealing with reestablishment of probiotics I would always suggest powder supplementation over yogurt - every time. Yogurt is simply a cheap alternative I would suggest, considering we do not even know if a lack of probiotics is the case in the original posters thread.