Abstract: | In chickens, virulent Escherichia coli strains express their pathogenicity in the respiratory tract. A quantitative comparison of tracheal colonization by virulent and avirulent E. coli was carried out in gnotoxenic chickens after intestinal implantation. Two-week-old axenic chicks reared in isolators were inoculated per os with various associations of identified E. coli strains. No clinical sign of disease was observed in any of the chicks, despite the presence of virulent strains in all the intestines and most of the tracheas. The virulent organism reached greater population sizes in the trachea and feces of monocontaminated chicks and of chicks contaminated simultaneously with a virulent and an avirulent strain. In holoxenic chicks, identified virulent and avirulent strains were outnumbered by the E. coli population of the intestinal flora previously established and could not be recovered from the tracheas of most chicks. |