Medication Versus Sanitation in the Control of Coccidiosis
1949; Elsevier BV; Volume: 28; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.3382/ps.0280686
ISSN1525-3171
AutoresCarolyn Hart, William H. Wiley, J.P. Delaplane, L. C. Grumbles, T.C. Higgins,
Tópico(s)Entomopathogenic Microorganisms in Pest Control
ResumoFOR YEARS experiment station and extension workers have recommended frequent removal of floor litter and replacement with clean material as a means of reducing the incidence of coccidiosis or preventing the disease in flocks. There is apparently general agreement that frequent changing of floor litter doe s reduce the number of oocysts present. Much information has been obtained concerning the use of sulfa drugs in the control of coccidiosis. An evaluation of the sulfonamides in the control of cecal coccidiosis can be found in the works of Levine (1939–41), Horton-Smith and Taylor (1942–43), Farr and Allen (1942), Hawkins (1943), Ripsom and Herrick (1935), Swales (1944–46), Seegar and Tomhave (1946), and Thorp et al. (1947). Delaplane et al. (1947) first reported the effectiveness of sulfaquinoxaline in the control of cecal coccidiosis under laboratory and field conditions. Grumbles et al. (1948 a, b, c, d) showed that sulfaquinoxaline could . . .
Referência(s)