4.7 Article

Restoration of anticoccidial sensitivity to a commercial broiler chicken facility in Canada

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 100, Issue 2, Pages 663-674

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2020.10.042

Keywords

coccidiosis; broiler chicken; anticoccidial resistance; anticoccidial sensitivity test; commercial production

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC
  2. Ottawa, ON, Canada) [400566]
  3. Ontario Agri-Food Innovations Alliance (Guelph, ON, Canada) [030370]
  4. Ontario Veterinary College Graduate Student Stipend
  5. Poultry Health Research Network (University of Guelph)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Increasing resistance of Eimeria species to anticoccidial medications is a concern in the broiler chicken industry. Using drug-sensitive vaccine strains has been shown to enhance anticoccidial effectiveness in Canadian broiler production facilities. However, the requirement to remove litter between flocks under Canadian broiler production rules may limit the establishment of vaccine-strain Eimeria species and potentially reduce the longevity of improved drug sensitivity observed in this study.
Increasing resistance of Eimeria species to anticoccidial medications is an issue in the broiler chicken industry. Using drug-sensitive strains in live-coccidiosis vaccines has been shown to improve anticoccidial effectiveness in US-based broiler production. In Canada, litter is removed between flocks, which differ from the US industry practice. Thus, we investigated the use of drug-sensitive vaccine strains in a Canadian broiler production facility with suspected anticoccidial resistance. Weekly fecal samples were collected from flocks before, during, and after vaccine seeding to determine oocyst shedding patterns; following the vaccine seeding, OPG counts from similar aged birds were lower than flocks before live-coccidiosis vaccine use. Eimeria species isolates, collected before and after vaccine seeding, were used in 2 anticoccidial sensitivity tests to evaluate their susceptibility to commercially available anticoccidial medications; a low-dose challenge to define parasite replication, and a high-dose challenge to monitor broiler performance. In both experiments, isolates collected after seeding were more susceptible to almost every anticoccidial medication evaluated compared with the isolates collected before seeding. These results demonstrate an improvement in sensitivity to many anticoccidials after the use of live-coccidiosis vaccines at this facility. However, the regulated removal of litter at the end of each flock required under Canadian broiler chicken production management rules could limit the establishment of vaccine-strain Eimeria species in broiler facilities and could shorten the longevity of improved drug sensitivity observed in this study.

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