Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-gvh9x Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-20T06:34:49.506Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hormonal augmentation of fertility in sheep: I. Induction of ovulation, superovulation and heat in sheep

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

J. Hammond Jnr
Affiliation:
School of Agriculture, Cambridge
J. Hammond
Affiliation:
School of Agriculture, Cambridge
A. S. Parkes
Affiliation:
National Institute for Medical Research, Hampstead, London, N.W. 3.

Extract

1. Gonadotrophic extracts of horse-pituitary gland, of pregnant mare serum and of urine of pregnant women, as well as oestrogenic substances, will induce ovulation in anoestrous sheep. The number of ova shed is apparently independent of the dosage given and lies within the normal range.

2. The oestrogens probably act by evoking ovulation-producing activity on the part of the animal's own pituitary gland, and it is likely that the gonadotrophins also initiate the same chain of events by causing oestrogen secretion by the ovary.

3. Oestrogens induce heat in the anoestrous sheep, but horse-pituitary extract and P.M.S. evoked sexual receptivity only in animals having a regressing corpus luteum. In the absence of a corpus luteum, ovulation occurs without heat, while the presence of an active corpus luteum usually suppresses both ovulation and heat.

4. Administration of horse pituitary a few days before the corpus luteum is due to regress results in superovulation at the succeeding heat, as many as twelve simultaneous ovulations having been obtained under these conditions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1942

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Anderson, J. (1938). Vet. J. 94, 328.Google Scholar
Bell, T. D., Casida, L. E., Bohstedt, G. & Darlow, A. E. (1941). J. Agric. Res. 62, 573.Google Scholar
Chance, M., Rowlands, I. W. & Young, F. G. (1939). J. Endocrinol. 1, 239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, M. C. (1941). Thesis on Ram Spermatozoa. Univ. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Clark, R. T. (1934). Anat. Rec. 60, 135.Google Scholar
Cole, H. H. (1936). Amer. J. Anat. 59, 299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, H. H. & Miller, R. F. (1933). Amer. J. Physiol. 104, 165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cole, H. H. & Miller, R. F. (1935). Amer. J. Anat. 57, 39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, W. W. & Winters, L. M. (1935). Anat. Rec. 61, 457.Google Scholar
Ivanov, I.Prelim. Comm. Zootechnic. Stat. Askania Nova. No date or source available.Google Scholar
Judovitch, S. S. (1939). Trans. All-Union Sov. Res. Inst. 10, 33.Google Scholar
Judovitch, S. S. & Fomenko, M. V. (1939). Trans. All-Union Sov. Res. Inst. 10, 65.Google Scholar
Kelley, R. B. (1937). Bull. Coun. Sci. Industr. Res. Aust. no. 112.Google Scholar
Litovchenko, I. G. (1935). Problems of Animal Husbandry, Moscow, 6, 98.Google Scholar
Litovchenko, I. G. (1936). Problems of Animal Husbandry, Moscow, 10, 41.Google Scholar
Loginova, N. V. (1939). Trans. All-Union Sov.Res. Inst. 10, 93.Google Scholar
Loginova, N. V. & Lopyrin, A. I. (1938). Problems of Animal Husbandry, Moscow, 10, 114.Google Scholar
Lopyrin, A. I. (1937). Advance of Zootechnical Science, 4, no. 1, p. 46.Google Scholar
Lopyrin, A. I. & Loginova, N. V. (Quoted by Loginova (1939), Trans. All-Union Sov. Res. Inst. 10, 93. Ref. not given.)Google Scholar
McKenzie, F. F. & Bogart, R. (1935). Res. Bull. Mo. Agric. Exp. Sta. no. 358, p. 11.Google Scholar
McKenzie, F. F., Allen, E., Guthrie, M. J., Warbritton, V., Terrill, C. E., Casida, L. E., Nahm, L. J. & Kennedy, J. W. (1933). Proc. Amer. Soc. Animal Production, p. 278.Google Scholar
McKenzie, F. F. & Terrill, C. E. (1937). Res. Bull. Mo. Agric. Exp. Sta. no. 264.Google Scholar
Polovtzova, V. V. & Judovitch, S. S. (1939). Trans. All-Union Sov. Res. Inst. 10, 127.Google Scholar
Quinlan, J., Maré, G. S. & Roux, L. L. (1932 a). 18th Rep. Dir. Vet. Serv. and Animal Industr. S.A., p. 831.Google Scholar
Quinlan, J., Maré, G. S. & Roux, L. L. (1932 b). J.S.Afr. Vet. Med. Ass. 111, 4.Google Scholar
Schott, R. G. & Philips, R. W. (1941). Anat. Rec. 79, 531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walton, A. (1936). Notes on Artificial Insemination of Sheep, Cattle and Horses. Holborn Surgical Instrument Co.Google Scholar
Zawadowsky, M. M. & Margulis, Z. S. (1939). Trans. Dyn. Dev. 11, 80.Google Scholar
Zawadowsky, M. M. & Padoocheva, A. L. (1939). Trans. Dyn. Dev. 11, 94.Google Scholar
Zawadowsky, M. M., Padoocheva, A. L. & Vunder, P. A. (1939). Trans. Dyn. Dev. 11, 32.Google Scholar
Zawadowsky, M. M., Vunder, P. A., Padoocheva, A. L. & Margvelashvili, S. S. (1935). Trans. Dyn. Dev. 11, 21.Google Scholar