Eimeria maxima

Eimeria maxima
Eimeria maxima oocysts
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
(unranked): SAR
(unranked): Alveolata
Phylum: Apicomplexa
Class: Conoidasida
Order: Eucoccidiorida
Family: Eimeriidae
Genus: Eimeria
Species: E. maxima
Binomial name
Eimeria maxima

Eimeria maxima is a species of Eimeria that causes coccidiosis in poultry. It is located in the middle part of the intestine, on either side of Meckel's diverticulum, and frequently ascends into the duodenum.[1] The lesions it causes are limited to the middle of the small intestine.

Characteristics of attenuated lines obtained by selection for precocious development in the chicken. [McDonald V, Shirley MW, Bellatti MA.] Abstract: Both the Weybridge strain and a mixture of six laboratory and field strains of Eimeria maxima have been attenuated by selection for early maturation of oocysts during serial passage in chickens. The prepatent times of the resultant precocious lines produces after selection were reduced from approximately 120 hr to less than 107 hr, and their reproduction and pathogenicity were less than those of the parent strains. Chickens which had been inoculated with a small number of oocysts of the Weybridge precocious or mixed field isolate precocious lines were immune to subsequent challenge with the parent strains. In a comparison made between the endogenous development of the precocious lines and their parent strains, it was found that asexual multiplication of the precocious lines was reduced, due to the earlier onset of gametogony. The results of this study also indicate that the parent (i.e., normal) strains of E. maxima probably undergo a minimum of four generations of schizogony.

References


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