Abstract. Gnotobiotic piglets were infected with a strain of rotavirus that had been isolated from a calf and passaged four times in piglets. The resulting disease was studied by light and electron microscopy at 21,44 and 68h after inoculation. In thesmall intestine infection caused desquamation of the epithelial cells of the villi resulting in severe stunting. There was severe damage to microvilli and accumulation of lipid within the cytoplasm. Virus particles were seen in epithelial cells covering the stunted villi. Infection also caused desquamation of the superficial epithelial cells of the stomach mucosa and of the epithelial cells of the bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli of the lungs. The reovirus-like particles, which have been seen in faeces of young children with acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis, have been found to be morphologically indistinguishable from those of neonatal calf diarrhoea [8, 101. The calf and human viruses also appeared morphologically and antigenically distinct from both reoviruses and orbiviruses, and the term rotavirus has been proposed [7-91.Although the calf and human rotaviruses are morphologically indistinguishable, we were unable to infect calves with human virus. Piglets, however, are susceptible to infection with human virus [5] but do not become ill. We passed calf rotavirus serially five times in gnotobiotic piglets, and each passage produced profuse diarrhoea, depression and anorexia. Our serological studies have shown that pigs are naturally infected either with calf