Top 10 similar words or synonyms for zuernii

besnoitia    0.906742

hammondia    0.899366

hepatozoon    0.886112

arloingi    0.884528

gallopavonis    0.883888

truttae    0.883396

spirometra    0.882977

bovihominis    0.881723

ovicanis    0.880685

bovicanis    0.876083

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for zuernii

Article Example
Coccidiosis Coccidiosis is one of the most important diseases in calves and youngstock both under housing conditions and when grazing. Symptoms are generally caused by the species Eimeria zuernii and Eimeria bovis and include loss of appetite, fatigue, dehydration, and watery, sometimes bloody, diarrhoea. Outbreaks are known to occur in cattle herds. The parasite can infect up to all animals in the farm and in some countries the parasite is present in all farms. Coccidiosis affect the growth and sometimes survival of the calves and consequently affect the production and the profitability of cattle livestock production.
Eimeria The most prevalent species of "Eimeria" that cause coccidiosis in cattle are "E. bovis", "E. zuernii", and "E. auburnensis". In a young, susceptible calf it is estimated that as few as 50,000 infective oocysts can cause severe disease. "Eimeria" infections are particularly damaging to the poultry industry and costs the United States more than $1.5 billion in annual loses. The most economically important species among poultry are "E. tenella", "E. acervulina", and "E. maxima". The oocysts of what was later called "Eimeria steidai" were first seen by the pioneering Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632–1723) in the bile of a rabbit in 1674. The genus is named after the German zoologist Theodor Eimer (1843–1898).
Eimeria Eimeria is a genus of apicomplexan parasites that includes various species capable of causing the disease coccidiosis in animals such as cattle, poultry, and smaller ruminants including sheep and goats. "Eimeria" species are considered to be monoxenous because the life cycle is completed within a single host, and stenoxenous because they tend to be host specific, although a number of exceptions have been identified. Species of this genus infect a wide variety of hosts. Thirty-one species are known to occur in bats (Chiroptera), two in turtles, and 130 named species infect fish. Two species ("E. phocae" and "E. weddelli") infect seals. Five species infect llamas and alpacas: "E. alpacae", "E. ivitaensis", "E. lamae", "E. macusaniensis", and "E. punonensis". A number of species infect rodents, including "E. couesii", "E. kinsellai", "E. palustris", "E. ojastii" and "E. oryzomysi". Others infect poultry ("E. necatrix" and "E. tenella"), rabbits ("E. stiedae") and cattle ("E. bovis", "E. ellipsoidalis", and "E. zuernii"). For full species list, see below.