Bio Security in poultry farm—Fogging procedure of disinfectant
Bio Security in poultry farm—Fogging procedure of disinfectant. We manufacture very effective DISINFECTANT for poultry farm
Fogging is a common way to disinfect poultry houses with virucidal disinfectants like peroxymonosulfate, glutaraldehyde, or quaternary blends. It produces a fine mist that reaches surfaces, cracks, airspaces, and equipment. Here’s a clear guide:
🔹 Steps for Fogging a Poultry Farm with Virucidal Disinfectant
1. Preparation
- Remove birds: Fogging is usually done after flock removal. For routine low-dose air sanitation, birds may stay inside, but only with disinfectants specifically approved for in-presence fogging.
- Clean first: Wash down litter, dust, manure, and organic matter. Disinfectants lose strength if surfaces are dirty.
- Seal house: Close doors, windows, and ventilation inlets to keep the fog inside.
2. Disinfectant Solution
- Dilution: Follow the manufacturer’s label (commonly 5–1% solution for peroxymonosulfate-based products).
- Mixing: Always add disinfectant to water, never water to disinfectant, to avoid splashing hazards.
- Volume needed: Around 1–2 liters of solution per 100 m³ of house volume is typical.
3. Fogging Equipment
- Thermal foggers (produce very fine droplets, 5–15 microns, good for airspace and crevices).
- Cold ULV foggers (ultra-low volume, droplet size 15–30 microns, better for surface coverage).
- Fixed fogging lines may also be installed in large poultry houses.
4. Fogging Procedure
- Place fogger centrally or move it around for uniform coverage.
- Switch off ventilation during fogging; restart after 2–4 hours for air exchange.
- Allow at least 6–12 hours contact time before re-entry.
- If birds are present (only with safe, approved products):
- Use lower concentration.
- Fog during cooler times of day.
- Keep ventilation minimal but avoid oxygen deprivation
5. Safety Precautions
- Wear PPE: mask/respirator, gloves, goggles, overalls.
- Do not stay inside during fogging (unless using in-presence low-dose sanitation under label guidance).
- Dispose of leftover solution safely (not into natural water sources).
6. Frequency
- Terminal disinfection: After each flock, as part of full clean-out.
- Routine air disinfection: Some farms fog weekly or biweekly at reduced concentrations to cut airborne viral load.
✅ Key tip: Fogging should be the final step in a cleaning and disinfection program. Cleaning + spraying surfaces + fogging ensures maximum biosecurity.