"One contributor to this discussion has described the calcium regulation process in some detail but I am certain that she is wrong that the body will not lose the ability to regulate calcium if it
is routinely bombarded with highly bio-available calcium. Let me try to give an answer based on both theory and many years of quite diverse experiences.My first exposure to this was many years ago when I
used to breed cows in Australia. Feed pregnant cows on a diet high in calcium (just good quality grass is enough) and you will get "milk fever" immediately after calving. This is a very badly named
problem as it is not a fever at all.
What happens is this. After calving the cow has a dramatic demand for calcium as milk production is quickly initiated. This calcium is removed from the blood by the
mammary glands. If they have had a great deal of calcium in their feed they simply don't mobilise enough calcium from the bones quickly enough to cope with this demand surge. The body has lost the ability to
do this simply by lack of use. The feed doesn't provide enough either. So the blood removes calcium from nerves and muscles which then fail to work properly. Cows with milk fever stagger around and fall over
in a state of partial paralysis!!
Any dairy farmer or dairy vet will tell you the treatment for milk fever is an intravenous injection of calcium. Sometimes they will give both calcium and magnesium.
Prevention is far better than treatment as it causes far less stress. Dairy farmers feed low bio-available calcium foods to their stock prior to calving and don't have the problem as they have exercised the
bone's ability to mobilise calcium quickly when required. Milk fever can occur in any mammal.
When we first started to sell our Calcivet (CalciBoost) product we were being advised by bird vets. The
recommended regime was to feed the product daily. I recall one canary breeder who took that advice (in conjunction with lots of high calcium brocolli) and had 14 egg bound hens in his first round!!! He
probably had just 20-30 breeding hens making this a disaster of mammoth proportions. Here the process is almost the same except as the mammal one except that the sudden calcium demand comes from egg shell
production. Again the nerves and muscles are starved of calcium and the hen is unable to expel the egg (which may or may not have a soft shell).
We like to think of ourselves as a firm that tries to
understand how our products are working or failing our customers. The similarity to milk fever was obvious so, at that point, we changed our recommendation to incorporate breaks from Calcivet (CalciBoost).
Our general recommendation is 1-2 times a week for non breeders and up to 5 times a week for breeders. However Calcivet (CalciBoost) on alternate days or four days on three off or anything similar will be
fine.
The amount of calcium (hardness) in your water will also influence the requirement. I know of a budgie breeder from a very hard water area who uses Calcivet (CalciBoost) once a week for non breeders
and just twice a week for breeders. He doesn't use cuttlefish or grit but he has fit hens and large clutches. In very soft water areas five days a week at full dose may not be quite enough!
Nobody reports
egg binding problems on these various regimes yet we do get larger clutch sizes and far fitter hens capable of producing more rounds with no stress to their system.
This on/off calcium system works very
well. It exercises the body's ability to regulate calcium levels. It give plenty of calcium to maintain high bone calcium levels (and hence the ability to make plenty of eggs*). Yet gives plenty of
opportunity to remove excess calcium from the body and causing damage to the kidneys or other organs.
*As an aside the bones of a small bird (work done on canaries) contain about enough calcium to make
3.5 eggs. So it is obvious if we want clutches of 6-8 (I can think of plenty of our zebra finch breeder customers producing 9-10 fertile eggs in some clutches from selected hens) that the calcium regime has
to be excellent.
We like to think that nature has designed perfect systems. Unfortunately this is not true. And when we keep animals in captivity we sometimes push the biology to the limit without
realising it. Let me quote a human example:
Many years ago my wife, Sally, used to work for Mars. There was always free confectionary available in the office all day long. We lived 45 minutes from her
office and, by the time I had driven her home she was shaking. She couldn't do anything until she ate a biscuit! What was happening was that, by constantly bombarding her blood with sugar and glucose, she
was losing the ability to control her blood sugar level when she needed to. When the blood sugar level dropped on the way home she couldn't replace it from her glycogen reserves. The process (which is well
understood and involves the hormone insulin) simply failed to adapt to Sally's diet.
She didn't have diabetes. When she stopped stuffing herself with candies the problem went away.
These problems occur
because nature cannot afford to waste resources. If we are not using something the body reduces the resources allocated to it. I can think of many examples. People taking little excersise lose bone mass and
muscle mass. The reverse is that athletes gain bone and muscle mass. Move to high altitude and you will produce more red blood cells to get better value from the low levels of oxygen in the air. Go back to
sea level and the process reverses.
Stop the need to remove calcium form the bones and the body reduces the resources allocated to making the parathyroid hormone needed for the job.
These changes can
lead to dramatic effects when we stress the system. A non athlete is far more likely to break a bone if he plays a game a soccer. People die of altitude sickness if they climb too quickly. Birds get egg
bound if their calcium regime isn't adequate.
So my view is that the miracle of life is fantastic. But we can easily push it beyond its limits. Traditional bird keeper calcium sources (cuttlebone and
oystershell grit) don't provide enough bio-available calcium. Our bird's bodies are not designed to take calcium from inorganic sources like that. Small clutches, egg binding and rickets are the common
results. Wild birds get their calcium from naturally chelated sources in fresh green seeds and foods. Humans get theirs from fresh foods and chelated sources like milk. CalciBoost mimics these more natural
systems which is why it is so effective. But the wise use it with care and follow the manufacturer's instructions!
I hope this has helped to explain the dilemma and answer Sue's original question.
Malcolm Green "