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Veterinary Microbiology and Immunobiology

Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4

Enterotoxaemia

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Veterinary Preventive Medicine, Epidemiology, and Public Health

Down And Out [Pulpy Kidney Disease], F C. Wilkinson Jan 1966

Down And Out [Pulpy Kidney Disease], F C. Wilkinson

Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4

Two days previously the weaner mob had broken through a gate into a hundred acre paddock in which an excellent green oat crop was growing.

The owner had not been particularly worried because the oats needed grazing. When however, he went to check the water troughs and found 17 weaners dead, he became perturbed.


Enterotoxaemia (Pulpy Kidney Disease), J Craig Jan 1966

Enterotoxaemia (Pulpy Kidney Disease), J Craig

Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4

ENTEROTOXAEMIA, or pulpy kidney disease, is found in all areas of the world where sheep are raised and has occurred in Western Australia for many years, particularly in the great southern districts.

At one time it was known as "Beverley sheep disease."

The infectious nature of enterotoxaemia was first described by Bennets in 1932.


Pulpy Kidney Is Still A Sheep Killer, F C. Wilkinson Jan 1960

Pulpy Kidney Is Still A Sheep Killer, F C. Wilkinson

Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4

ALTHOUGH considerable publicity has been given to methods of control by vaccination, numbers of sheep are lost every year in outbreaks of infectious enterotoxaemia— the disease commonly known as "pulpy kidney."