# Monovalent Copper Oxide in Broiler Nutrition: Effects on Performance, Intestinal Lesions, and Oocyst Shedding During Mild Eimeria Challenge

**Authors:** Nasima Akter, Thi Hiep Dao, Alip Kumar, David Cadogan, Tamsyn M. Crowley, Amy F. Moss

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/vetsci12050494 · Veterinary Sciences · 2025-05-19

## TL;DR

This study shows that adding copper to broiler diets may help reduce the spread of coccidiosis, a common poultry disease, without significantly improving growth.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that monovalent copper supplementation can reduce Eimeria oocyst shedding in broilers during a mild coccidiosis challenge.

## Key findings

- Copper supplementation significantly reduced oocyst excretion in challenged birds.
- Copper tended to improve feed conversion ratio during the grower phase.
- The mild Eimeria challenge was confirmed through lesion scores and oocyst counts.

## Abstract

Coccidiosis constitutes a significant challenge to the global poultry industry, particularly following the ban on in-feed coccidiostats. Expensive vaccines and economic losses due to coccidiosis make poultry producers seek sustainable alternatives, with copper supplementation being one such alternative. This project explores the effect of dietary copper on mitigating coccidiosis, demonstrating that copper supplementation maintained growth performance and had the potential to reduce the number of Eimeria oocysts in the feces of Eimeria-challenged birds.

Coccidiosis is a major economic threat in poultry, and with anticoccidials being phased out, cost-effective alternatives like copper (Cu) supplementation are of interest. This study investigated whether in-feed monovalent Cu (100 ppm) could mitigate the effects of a mild Eimeria challenge in broilers. A total of 216 broiler chicks were randomly assigned to three treatments (six replicates, 12 birds/replicate): unchallenged control (NC), challenged control (PC), and challenged + Cu-supplemented. Birds were fed starter (days 1–10), grower (days 10–21), and finisher (days 21–35) diets. On day 14, all birds except the NC group were orally challenged with 5000 oocysts each of Eimeria acervulina and E. maxima. Feces were collected (days 17–28) for oocyst count, and growth performance, lesion scores (day 21), carcass traits and bone morphology (day 35), gut morphology (days 21 and 35), gizzard weight (days 21 and 35), and cecal bacterial load (days 21 and 35) were evaluated. The mild challenge was confirmed by the observed differences in lesion scores on day 21 (p < 0.05), fecal oocyst counts from days 17–28 (p < 0.05), and overall mortality (p > 0.05) between challenged and unchallenged groups. Copper supplementation tended to improve FCR during the grower phase (1.403 vs. 1.469; p = 0.057) and significantly reduced oocyst excretion on days 23–25 (p < 0.001) compared to the PC treatment. Although performance benefits were limited, Cu reduced oocyst shedding, indicating potential anticoccidial effects. However, further studies are needed to confirm the consistency of this effect across different doses of Cu in poultry production.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** copper (PubChem CID 23978)
- **Diseases:** coccidiosis (MONDO:0005707)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Coccidiosis (MESH:D003048)
- **Chemicals:** Copper (MESH:D003300), PC (MESH:C053518), Copper Oxide (-)
- **Species:** Eimeria maxima (species) [taxon 5804], Eimeria acervulina (species) [taxon 5801]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12115536/full.md

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12115536/full.md

## References

98 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12115536/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12115536