Jenk wrote:
This morning, I noticed some dried cecal/fecal (most likely cecal) material stuck to the underside of my guy's tail. And just moments ago, I discovered more cecal stains (actual streaks) on his pen floor.
Again, I've never found a puddle of diarrhea in his pen, nor have I found uneaten cecals anywhere.But I don't think that dried cecal material stuck to his tail and streaked on the floor is normal, either.
My quandry is that if I reduce his daily pellet ration (from 5 Tbsp. to 4 Tbsp.), I don't think he'll be getting enough nutrients in his diet and may lose weight. (He's 8.5 lbs.)
Then again, streaked cecal material doesn't seem like a good thing, either.
Its really very very normal.
When Pipp (or anybunny else here) has had cecal dysbiosis, the cecals were liquid and the rabbit was lethargic.
Healthy cecals are sticky, some are runnier than others. Some rabbits have different eating habits and some may not be as pristine. This is the kind of thing where adjustment is unnecessary and less healthy then letting it progress naturally.
Having one bunny with stickier cecals, others with smaller darker poops, etc, is really natural and shouldn't be even responded to. Humans don't always eat the same things, chew our food the same way or have exactly the same output.
When my genetically challenged megacolon trio had their large, oddly shaped poops or runny cecals smeared on the floor, it their diet was given a minor tweak to increase fiber -- canned pumpkin, mix up different varieties of hay to increase consumption, etc -- and that was the only 'treatment'.
They were fine. The girls are still find at their new foster home, and I doubt their diets are even getting that much attention.
Another point to ponder...
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onder: Pipp used to be so territorial, and she's never had regulated hours with me. So she'd find herself out of her room during her 'down' time when she was literally all pooped out. But she'd still do her best to eject whatever she could to mark Radar's doorway. The poops could be in any stage of production, she'd still manage to squeeze them out. When she couldn't get even one last poop out, she's start squeezing out the cecals.
These days, as I've mentioned before, Pipp is a big veggie bunny, she's consuming more digestible / roughage type fiber. She doesn't eat hay, and especially not the indigestible stuff that makes for fluffy poops, so her's will always be small, dark and hard. Sometimes they're misshapen. But this is also a sign of GOOD health with a veggie eater.
And even my big hay eaters will have big logs and sticky squished cecals, and they are not at all sick either.
I think people are taking some of the 'healthy poop' emphasis in Dana's articles out of context, and I don't think the article went very deep into the fecal composition with even mildly alternative diets. As a result, we have a generation of only semi-informed rabbit slaves trying to micromanage poop. Been there, done that! I had to learn from experience.
sas :bunnydance: