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A note on conception rates and litter sizes following the intrauterine insemination of ewes at an induced oestrus during seasonal anoestrus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

R. P. Aitken
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB2 9SB
J. M. Wallace
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB2 9SB
J. J. Robinson
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen AB2 9SB
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Abstract

Priming with a progestagen-impregnated vaginal pessary followed by an injection of 750 i.u. pregnant mare serum gonadotropin at pessary withdrawal was used to induce oestrus and ovulation during anoestrus (13 June, latitude 57°N) in 58 Border Leicester × Scottish Blackface ewes that had lambed previously in late March/early April. At 54 to 58 h after pessary withdrawal the uterus of each ewe was viewed by laparoscopy and 50 × 106 viable sperm deposited into each uterine horn. Mean ovulation rate was 2·9 (s.d. 0·12; range 1 to 5). Plasma progesterone concentrations remained >1·5 μg/l in 54 (93%) of the ewes until at least day 21 after insemination implying a high fertilization rate. After allowing for three ewes that were observed to abort between 39 and 55 days after insemination and another three, carrying nine normally developed lambs, that died between 102 and 136 days of gestation, 40 of the remaining 48 ewes (i.e. 69% of the original 58) produced 76 viable lambs in early November. These conception and lambing rates obtained following the intrauterine insemination of 100× 106 viable sperm per ewe are more than double those obtained following natural mating or conventional cervical insemination with four times the number of viable sperm and imply that intrauterine insemination may enhance lamb production from ewes induced to breed during seasonal anoestrus.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1990

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References

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