University of Pretoria. Faculty of Veterinary Science. Dept. of Paraclinical Sciences. Section of PathologyUniversity of Pretoria. Faculty of Veterinary Science. Dept. of Veterinary Tropical Diseases2009-09-302009-09-302009-09-30cocc_48http://hdl.handle.net/2263/11401Metadata assigned by Prof. R.C. Tustin, Professor Emeritus: DVTD. His academic and professional experience includes: veterinarian for 54 years, senior lecturer at UP for 7 years, head of Department at UP for 17 years and Veterinary Council for 3 years.Colour photo. Original document size: (w)7 x (h)4.57 cm. ((w) 1653 pix x (h) 1080 pix). Original scanned size: 349 kb JPEG, 600 dpi. Final web-ready size: 41.89 kb. Estimate download time: 16 sec.@28.8 kbps. Original TIFF file housed at the Dept. Veterinary Tropical Diseases, University of Pretoria.Microscopic appearance of coccidial oocysts in sheep faeces. Numerous round oocysts are present. The slide was prepared by the flotation technique of infected sheep faeces.1 col. photo©University of Pretoria. Dept of Veterinary Tropical Diseases (Original and digital) Provided for educational purposes only. It may not be downloaded, reproduced or distributed in any format without written permission of the original copyright holder. Any attempt to circumvent the access controls placed on this file is a violation of copyright laws and is subject to criminal prosecution. Please contact the collection administrator for copyright issues.SheepFaecesOocystsVeterinary protozoology -- South AfricaCoccidiosis -- South AfricaProtozoan diseases -- South AfricaCoccidiosis in animals -- South AfricaCoccidial oocycts in sheep faecesStill Image