1. The effect of dietary crude protein level on intestinal and cecal coccidiosis in chicken.
- Author
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Sharma VD, Fernando MA, and Summers JD
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Weight, Cecal Diseases, Chickens, Coccidiosis therapy, Feces microbiology, Intestinal Diseases, Male, Time Factors, Coccidiosis veterinary, Dietary Proteins therapeutic use, Eimeria, Poultry Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
The effect of interaction of crude protein level in the diet and coccidiosis of the cecum and small intestine of chicks was investigated. A total of 390 day-old chicks were divided in 36 groups of ten and six groups of five chicks each. Twelve groups of ten and two groups of six chicks each were fed one of the three diets based on dietary crude protein level (16%, 20% and 24%). All diets contained an equal energy concentration. The chicks were on the appropriate diet for 15 days prior to infection. Each group was then subjected to one of the three treatments (a) control, (b) a single dose infection with 100,000 oocysts of Eimeria acervulina and (c) a single dose infection with 10,000 oocysts of Eimeria tenella. On the eighth day post infection all surviving E. tenella infected chicks and two replicates per dietary treatment of control and E. acervulina infected chicks were killed. An increase in dietary crude protein led to a linear (P<0.01) increase in daily gains and feed efficiency but did not affect feed consumption of chicks during one to 15 days pre-infection. Coccidiosis caused a reduction in daily gain, feed consumption and efficiency of feed utilization, the effect being more severe in E. tenella infection. The effect of dietary crude protein was protective against weight reduction. Chicks infected with E. tenella fed 24% crude protein had a higher (P<0.01) mortality rate than those fed on 16% or 20% crude protein level. The oocyst production by E. acervulina infected chicks was also higher (P<0.01) at the 24% crude protein level. The E. acervulina infected chicks exhibited compensatory growth during the eight to 14 days post infection. The compensatory growth was superior at the higher crude protein levels. The mechanism of compensatory growth is discussed.
- Published
- 1973