Abstract: | Nine bred gilts were vaccinated with 2 doses of a Clostridium perfringens type C toxoid at a 5-week interval. Time of vaccination during gestation differed among the gilts. Clostridium perfringens beta antitoxin in colostral samples and in serum samples was titrated in mice. Blood was collected from 2 to 5 neonatal pigs from each dam (total = 32 pigs) when the pigs were 36 to 48 hours old. Antitoxin titers in colostrum were 123 to 4.5 IU/ml, indicating considerable variation in individual responses of the gilts to toxoid. Serum titers of neonatal pigs reflected colostrum titers of their dams. This colostrum-to-serum titer correlation was essentially a straight-line fit by least-squares linear regression analysis, establishing a direct proportional relationship between colostrum titers and serum titers of neonatal pigs. In the dams, a correlation was not found between colostral titers and serum titers of blood samples collected 2 weeks after collection of colostrum. |