Transmission of Acute Respiratory Disease (Rhinotracheitis) of Turkeys
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Avian Diseases
- Vol. 23 (1) , 132-138
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1589680
Abstract
Clinical signs of acute respiratory disease in turkeys were transmitted to susceptible day-old poults by direct contact, litter contact and drinking water. Attempts failed to transmit the disease by air (cage-to-cage) or by oral and nasal inoculation with feces, nasal exudates or nasal turbinate extracts. Adenovirus-associated rhinotracheitis was not transmitted by inoculation with white blood cells. Chicks were not affected by the disease, but young quail developed signs of respiratory disease when exposed to contaminated drinking water. Apparently acute respiratory disease in turkeys is of an infectious nature, and the infectious agent(s) probably exist in the heavily contaminated environment used to house young commercial turkey poults.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Physicochemical Characterization and Pathogenicity Studies of Two Turkey Adenovirus IsolantsAvian Diseases, 1977
- Histopathology of a Rhinotracheitis of Turkey Poults Associated with AdenovirusesAvian Diseases, 1977
- A Technique for Isolating Turkey Respiratory AdenovirusesMaterials, 1976
- Isolation and Identification of a Turkey Respiratory AdenovirusAvian Diseases, 1976