Tips for successful coccidiosis vaccination
Successful coccidiosis
vaccination depends on good
brooding management as well
as proper administration of the
vaccine in the hatchery at 1 day
of age, says Dr. Matilde Alfonso,
a technical service veterinarian
with Intervet/Schering-Plough
Animal Health.
Here are a few tips that can help
ensure good results:
- Understand
coccidial
cycling.
After vaccination, coccidial
parasites replicate in the birds,
which then shed coccidial
oocysts in feces at about 7 days
of age. Birds ingest oocysts from
litter, parasites replicate again
and a second cycle of oocysts
are shed at about 14 days of age.
The process initiates the
development of immunity.
- Use half-house
brooding
from 1 day of age until 10 to 14
days of age to help ensure all
birds ingest enough oocysts to
achieve uniform coccidial
cycling. Proper stocking density
varies with bird size.
- Give
vaccinated
birds access
to the full house at 10 to 14
days of age — before the
second coccidial cycling.
If the second cycling occurs
before the full house is used,
birds still in the half-house
area ingest too many oocysts,
while those in the rest of the
house ingest too few. Flock
immunity won’t be uniform.
- Guard against
wet litter.
It promotes more coccidial
cycling than necessary.
- Provide
enough
feeders.
Otherwise birds peck litter
more and ingest more
oocysts than needed.
- Don’t panic
at the first
sight of
gut lesions.
Some lesions in vaccinated
birds are expected and
normal. In fact, they’re a
sure sign that the vaccine
is working to stimulate the
birds’ immune systems.
Consult an Intervet/
Schering-Plough Animal
Health poultry sales or
technical services
representative to learn
what level of postvaccination
reaction is to
be expected.
Regresar a North American Edition (#2)