Abstract: | Nineteen Holstein-Friesian bull calves were inoculated with 2.4 × 106 sporocysts of Eimeria zuernii by stomach tube. The calves were divided into three groups 10 days after infection. The first group (seven calves) was treated with monensin (1 mg/kg body weight daily) from the 10th–20th day after infection; the second group (six calves) with amprolium (10 mg/kg body weight daily) for the same period of time and the third group (six calves) acted as infected controls. Both drugs were effective in preventing clinical signs, in reducing rates of weight gain and in suppressing oocyst production. The calves were reinfected with E. zuernii 35 days after the initial infection. The calves of all three groups were resistant to the second infection with E. zuernii as measured by rates of weight gain, fecal oocyst output and lack of clinical signs. |