|
HS Code |
498406 |
| Chemical Name | Maduramicin Ammonium |
| Cas Number | 79356-08-4 |
| Molecular Formula | C47H83NO17·NH4 |
| Molecular Weight | 1000.16 g/mol |
| Appearance | White to off-white powder |
| Solubility | Slightly soluble in water, soluble in methanol |
| Usage | Coccidiostat in poultry feed |
| Melting Point | 180-190°C (decomposes) |
| Storage Temperature | 2-8°C, protect from light |
| Toxicity | High toxicity to non-target species (such as horses and dogs) |
As an accredited Maduramicin Ammonium factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | Maduramicin Ammonium is typically packaged in a sealed, 25 kg fiber drum with inner plastic lining for moisture protection and labeling. |
| Shipping | Maduramicin Ammonium should be shipped in tightly sealed, clearly labeled containers, protected from moisture and light. Transport should comply with relevant hazardous material regulations, ensuring temperature control and minimal handling. Appropriate documentation and safety data sheets (SDS) must accompany the shipment to ensure safe and compliant delivery. |
| Storage | Maduramicin Ammonium should be stored in a tightly closed container, protected from light, moisture, and incompatible substances. Keep it in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area, away from strong oxidizing agents. Store at room temperature and ensure proper labeling to prevent accidental exposure. Follow local regulations and safety guidelines for handling and storage of hazardous chemicals. |
Competitive Maduramicin Ammonium prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
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Years in the business teach you there are few shortcuts in feed additives that pay off in the long run. Maduramicin Ammonium, with the formula C47H83NO17·NH4, has taken its place on the production line for a good reason. Developed for use in poultry, this ionophore coccidiostat targets a set of protozoan parasites, helping prevent coccidiosis outbreaks in broilers. Our team has watched the shift in demands across feed manufacturers: tighter regulations, animal welfare moves up, pressure for consistent outcomes. Delivering a product that actually responds to farm-level challenges sets the bar high. Maduramicin Ammonium speaks to those real concerns.
Unlike some ingredients that see more hype than actual need, Maduramicin Ammonium lands in feed mills because outbreaks of Eimeria remain a constant threat. This product usually comes as Maduramicin Ammonium Alpha or Beta—two variants with similar action. Most of the market moves on a technical-grade powder, typically at a concentration of 1-1.5%, blended down to reach target in-feed levels. Production runs reflect steady requests for the sodium and ammonium salts, but ammonium salts win out in stability when exposed to the high humidity or variable storage environments of many countries. The strategic value lies in its narrow dose window: Coccidiostats that tolerate sloppy mixing might boost resistance or drive toxicity. Manufacturers that hold close control standards—starting from the microcrystalline structure up to packaging—deliver products that livestock producers ask for by name. Consistency brings returning customers.
Flocks usually cycle through a handful of coccidiosis prevention programs during the year. Some programs switch between several ionophores to reduce parasite resistance; others rotate with chemical anticoccidials like nicarbazin. Maduramicin Ammonium has earned a place in these programs because it clears both acute and chronic forms of Eimeria, especially in dense production houses. In technical meetings, we keep hearing the same story: conditions differ across seasons, bird breeds, and region, but Maduramicin keeps trouble at bay with a low inclusion rate. The powder blends efficiently, and with careful moisture management in the granulation process, even distribution through feed gets achieved batch after batch. This is vital, since uneven doses can trigger toxicities or leave gaps for outbreaks.
We often field questions from nutritionists comparing Maduramicin Ammonium to products like monensin, salinomycin, or narasin. Each has its own risk-benefit profile. Maduramicin stands out for its potency at low feed levels—often less than 6 ppm—making it one of the most concentrated coccidiostats on the market. This brings two main advantages: Feed manufacturers use less active material per ton, which lowers cost contributions and shrinks the space needed for storage. But that same potency means tighter control of mixing and increased focus during transport—dust losses or mishandling in bulk silos can cause uneven concentrations in final feeds. As a manufacturer, tackling these risks means running particle-size checks, anti-caking tests, and constant batch sampling.
In contrast, monensin or lasalocid require higher inclusion rates, which sometimes helps with dose uniformity but adds volume to each feed batch. Monensin’s broader application range matches flocks exposed to more challenging health profiles, but it also shows a higher rate of resistance in certain countries. Maduramicin Ammonium, in our experience, offers a smaller opportunity for Eimeria adaptation through its higher efficacy at lower exposure rates.
Today’s regulatory scene drives stricter controls over all veterinary drugs. Every year, we commit major resources to keeping Maduramicin Ammonium within the specifications set by global authorities—China, the EU, Brazil, Middle East, and Southeast Asia all set different residue thresholds and tolerances for use periods. Some countries ban its use during the withdrawal phase before slaughter, underscoring a need for exact inclusion controls in processing. As a direct producer, we see fewer issues with residue when blending is handled inside controlled production runs, not farm-level mixing. Documentation runs with every lot; laboratory retention samples get checked for both content and any by-products that regulators frown upon. Staff know that lapses in these steps cost long-term business relationships, and undermining trust in animal feeds can ripple through entire supply chains.
Maduramicin Ammonium’s flow properties, solubility, moisture sensitivity, and blending dynamics each matter more than most expect. Several customers have shared that even small clumping issues affect their pelletizing lines or screw augers. Our batch-to-batch control prevents hydration or breakdown of the active molecule, especially in export shipments with long travel times in high-humidity environments. Where some competitors cut corners on anti-caking additives or packaging integrity, we invest in double-layered lined bags and run shelf-stability tests simulating months in tropical warehouses. These efforts do not show up on a standard registration file, but regular feedback from bulk feed mills proves this extra step matters.
From the chemist’s angle, maduramicin as an ionophore demonstrates both hydrophilic and lipophilic properties. The ammonium salt form holds a lower affinity for water than the sodium version, so it stores longer and avoids rapid degradation. This detail means less product lost to breakdown before reaching the animals, and fewer breakdown by-products that risk tainting downstream grain lines.
Producers operating in regions prone to mycotoxin contamination or inconsistent feed quality have reported fewer coccidiosis-related drop-offs when Maduramicin Ammonium forms part of their anticoccidial rotation plan. Direct cooperation with professional nutritionists on proper mixing protocols, additive compatibility, and monitoring ensures that products actually achieve the real, on-farm results manufacturers promise. Protocol development runs side by side with site training, and we always encourage direct troubleshooting for any barns experiencing uneven results.
Feedback has shown that flocks kept on continuous Maduramicin need rotational management to delay Eimeria resistance—no single anticoccidial holds up if used repeatedly. We provide practical guidance and updates on new rotation recommendations, based on both real-world field trials and published veterinary studies. We know farms suffer most when improper rotation schedules lead to sudden outbreaks with heavy economic losses. Direct conversations and follow-up reviews distinguish our technical service from competitors who just ship bags and walk away.
Each year the boundaries on residues and withdrawal requirements move a little. We test every batch for compliance with both exporting and local standards. Studies and long-term batch tracking confirm that Maduramicin Ammonium, used at recommended levels and phased out several days before slaughter, maintains compliance in finished meat. Technical documents on file include residue curves, batch variance, and full traceability for both raw materials and finished lots—protecting the value chain from farm to table.
The ingredient’s narrow safety margin calls for respect. Flocks exposed to overdoses experience reduced feed intake and quick onset of clinical signs. No operator wants returns or lost business through preventable events—so our internal QA protocols have been refined over the years from every batch that raised a question or failed to meet independent lab specs. End-users asleep to this reality are rare these days; insurance providers and meat buyers demand an audit trail that stands up to scrutiny.
Feed additive supply chains stretch from fermentation or synthesis facilities to large-scale premix factories, and down to regional and cooperative feed mills. We see growing demand for traceable raw materials and full documentation at every point. Ever since food safety and anti-contamination rules tightened, counterfeiters and short-cuts have cost the industry dearly. As a direct manufacturer, we secure active ingredient synthesis in-house, purchasing validated precursor chemicals, running identity and purity tests before any blending occurs. Final lots ship under seal, tracked through logistics partners with tamper-evident packaging.
This approach means customers see fewer unexplained feed batch failures and have direct recourse if anything goes amiss. Building this trust takes years—monitoring tolerances on every shipment, sharing open lab reports, and delivering technical support for on-site troubleshooting. Frequent communication with regulators, anti-fraud task forces, and quality-control auditors guards against surprise disruptions. Among other products, Maduramicin Ammonium attracts extra scrutiny for its importance in modern broiler operations, and living up to those standards demands constant attention.
Producing Maduramicin Ammonium means running every stage with an eye for downstream use. Raw material selection, fermenter sterilization, temperature and pH control during synthesis, and solvent extraction all have to run inside a narrow window. Teams work side by side with process chemists and production engineers to hit tight specifications—delivering free-flowing powder without off-colors, moisture-related caking, or unwanted microbial growth. Each finished lot is checked for dioxins, mycotoxins, related impurities, with multi-stage purification to catch anything that might drag down livestock health.
Diagnostic labs and poultry integrators now expect full transparency and adaptability should feeding programs or animal health guidelines shift. We adjust blends, coordinate with premix plants to ensure blending procedures line up with shifts in protein or carbohydrate sources, and consult on potential incompatibility issues with other additives or medication programs. Troubleshooting begins at raw-material intake and ends at the feed trough. This mindset means findings from the field, like abnormal reactions or differences in dose response, result in direct variations to either synthesis quality protocols or packaging standards.
Serving farmers and feed producers for decades, practical lessons have shaped the approach to Maduramicin Ammonium more than any marketing material. Producing a technically sound product does not solve every on-farm problem, but a transparent claim, batch reliability, and on-the-ground support help move the needle. Each year, new strain variations of Eimeria and shifts in climate test the product’s limits. Knowing when to suggest a change, supply a new technical bulletin, or advocate for storage procedure changes sets a manufacturer apart from just another supplier.
Our role involves keeping open dialogue with feed mill operators, listening to their machinery limitations or local sourcing challenges. Adjustments in powder moisture, granule sizing, or even in packaging thickness mean fewer disruptions in mills running older Chinese or South American lines. Those who ignore the daily grind of their customer base—farmers, nutritionists, QA inspectors—end up losing credibility fast, no matter how strong their technical sheet sounds.
Debate around antimicrobial resistance, consumer pushback against drug residues, and ever-tightening market access controls will only intensify in coming years. As a manufacturer, the strategy balances supporting existing ionophore use in places battling endemic coccidiosis with keeping tabs on regulatory shifts worldwide. Continuous investment in detection methods, field studies, and adaptable blending helps limit industry disruptions.
The farm landscape keeps changing. In places where poultry density has exploded, animal health risks pile up fast. Maduramicin Ammonium continues solving real problems for poultry producers who cannot gamble on lower-tier coccidiostats known for rapid resistance development. Yet staying relevant means planning for scenarios where regulations shift or animal health data prompts re-evaluation. As the science grows, so must the tools and flexibility controlling these threats.
Those buying directly from a true manufacturer see faster response times on any technical or regulatory question. Every complaint, special request, or insight from a customer leads upstream—adjustment in synthesis, blending, documentation, or packaging. This cycle of feedback, adaptation, and constant reassessment means the Maduramicin Ammonium reaching feed mills gets built on field input, not just a theoretical ideal. The result: a product trusted not only for its direct impact on pathogen control, but because it comes backed by the full resources and experience of a team that owns every step from raw material to loading dock.
Running a chemical manufacturing operation builds respect for the complexity each farm faces: tight margins, unpredictable outbreaks, variable ingredient quality, and shifting policy lines. Our team knows Maduramicin Ammonium remains only as good as the trust—and results—it delivers every day in real flocks. This product has been shaped by decades of real-world experience and hard results, not just regulatory compliance or chemical theory. For those seeking answers beyond marketing lines, the difference stands clear in every bag we deliver.