• 1 January 1965
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 8  (3) , 281-+
Abstract
Sixty lambs were divided into three groups each comprising twenty animals. Half the lambs in each group were vaccinated with the viable eggs and half with the activated embryos of Taenia ovis, T. hydatigena or T. pisiformis. These lambs together with ten control animals were subsequently challenged with eggs of T. ovis. Only one of the lambs in the group immunized with T. ovis completely resisted the challenge infection, but almost all of these lambs developed a solid resistance to the challenge infection, preventing it from reaching maturity at the site of election. No lamb in the group vaccinated with T. hydatigena completely resisted the challenge infection of T. ovis, but some animals harboured significantly fewer cysticerci of T. ovis than control sheep or those vaccinated with T. pisiformis. The injection of viable eggs or activated embryos of T. pisiformis induced no resistance to either the establishment or the subsequent survival of the challenge infection of T. ovis.