Protozoal incidence in balady chicken flocks after viral vaccinations | ||||
Benha Veterinary Medical Journal | ||||
Article 13, Volume 29, Issue 1, September 2015, Page 108-111 PDF (241.01 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/bvmj.2015.31801 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
Ramadan Y.1; Khater Seddiek2; Abd El-Aty A.3 | ||||
1Department of parasitology, faculty of Veterinary Medicine. Benha University | ||||
2Animal health research institute-Benha | ||||
3Animal health research institute-Shebin El-Koam | ||||
Abstract | ||||
The present study aimed to detect the incidence of protozoan parasites and their disease severity in balady chickens in relation to the routine viral vaccinations against Newcastle, Infectious bronchitis and Infectious bursal diseases. For this purpose, eight hundred balady chicks divided to 8 equal groups, 4 groups not artificially infected by Eimeria while the other 4groups were artificially infected. The collected samples were examined daily and the detected protozoa were Eimeria spp. (31%) and Cryptosporidium spp. (10%) during the vaccination period. The vaccinal dynamic revealed that the highest incidence of Eimeria (64%) was recorded in G2, while minimum oocyst count / gm feces ( 0.25×103 ) in G 6 at 14 days old, then a rapid , increase, specially 1- 2 days old after each vaccinal application to reach maximum (35×103 ) at the 30 days old. The lowest incidence of Eimeria spp., was in G 1& G3 (0%) and the minimum oocyst count / gm feces (0.1×103) and gradually increased to reach maximum (0.45×103) at 18 days old, then decreased again to (0.1×103) at the end of experiment in G7. It was concluded that stress caused by viral vaccinations affecting both incidence and severity of protozoal diseases, especially Eimeria on non-treated chicken groups. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
protozoa; chicken; viral vaccines; Eimeria, Cryptosporidium | ||||
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