The RSPCA fears chickens are being abandoned after many people bought chicks during lockdown and now can’t take care of them, particularly in light of bird flu warnings.

Dozens of hens and cockerels have been dumped in recent weeks, and the RSPCA fears that rescue centres will soon be overrun with abandoned chickens.

Overall, there has been 17 'chicken incidents' in Oxfordshire between January and November this year.

The RSPCA has dealt with 1,594 incidents related to chickens across England and Wales and has had abandonment incidents relating to 1,562 birds.

The charity has also taken 280 chickens into its centres for rehoming.

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A charity spokesperson said: “Concerns were raised during lockdown about the increase in pet acquisition and ownership, and we feared that people would soon lose interest and start to hand their animals over once life started to return to normal.

“In the spring, many hen producers reported huge surges in demand for chicks and we believe this may be because people panic bought birds due to shortages of eggs in the supermarkets but, due to the shops being better stocked, are now ‘surplus to requirement’.

"There are also concerns that some families may have taken on unsexed chicks, which have grown into noisy cockerels so are now being abandoned."

The RSPCA fears that there could be more 'chicken incidents' in the coming weeks as cases of bird flu are confirmed across the country, in both wild birds and captive birds.