Experimental infection of newborn calves with coccidia and reinfection after weaning.
- 1 October 1969
- journal article
- Vol. 33 (4) , 287-91
Abstract
Four newborn Hereford calves were orally inoculated five times with 100 sporulated oocysts of coccidia, predominantly Eimeria zurnii. Each calf was kept isolated with its dam until weaned at the age of 13 weeks. Three other newborn calves were similarly isolated but not experimentally infected. The calves were then challenged with 300,000 sporulated oocysts at the age of five, seven and nine months. The previously unexposed calves developed marked clinical coccidiosis after the first challenge, but resisted the second and third challenge. The neonatally exposed calves were susceptible to infection at the first challenge as well as to the next two challenges at seven and nine months of age, but the clinical signs following the last two challenges were milder than those of the first challenge. These findings suggest that under conditions where calves become infected with coccidia when very young, such calves may, by shedding oocysts in large numbers for long periods, be a continuing source of coccidial infections to other animals.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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