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Acquired Resistance to Experimental Heterakis Infections in Chickens and Turkeys: Effect on the Transmission of Histomonas meleagridis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2009

Everett E. Lund
Affiliation:
Belisville Parasitological Laboratory, Animal Disease and Parasite Research Division, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Departmentof Agriculture, Beltsville, Maryland.

Extract

Attempts were made to induce increased resistance to caecal worm infections in chickens and turkeys by giving 5-week-old birds embryonated Heterakis eggs. To test for such resistance, the birds were challenged 28 days later by feeding comparable numbers of embryonated eggs. To study the possible influence of any response on the transmission of blackhead, some of the birds received Heterakis eggs from worms grown in birds that had blackhead.

In blackhead-free chickens there was only a slight reduction in the number of worms recoveied from the initial infection as a result of the superimposed second infection. However, there were 37% fewer worms from the second feeding of eggs than were present in the control birds that had had no previous Heterakis infection. In blackhead-free turkeys, the immunized birds had fewer worms from both doses than did the controls. These reductions averaged about 40% in both instances.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

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References

Lund, E. E., 1958.—“Growth and development of Helerakis gallinae in turkeys and chickens infected with Histomonas mtleagridis.” J. Parasit., 44, 297301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar