Termination of the breeding season in the Suffolk ewe: Involvement of an endogenous rhythm of reproduction
Two studies were performed to determine if the transition into anestrus in the Suffolk ewe results from the lack of a decrease in photoperiod, a signal suggested to be important in maintaining the breeding season, or from an obligatory turn-off that reflects the expression of an endogenous rhythm of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 1988-09, Vol.39 (2), p.254-263 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Two studies were performed to determine if the transition into anestrus in the Suffolk ewe results from the lack of a decrease
in photoperiod, a signal suggested to be important in maintaining the breeding season, or from an obligatory turn-off that
reflects the expression of an endogenous rhythm of reproduction. Shortly after the autumnal equinox, three groups of ovariectomized
ewes bearing s.c. Silastic implants of estradiol were placed in different lighting environments. A control group was exposed
to normal variations in day length until the winter solstice and held on that day length thereafter. The two experimental
groups experienced either a continuously decreasing day length or a continuously increasing duration of elevated melatonin
levels during each 24-h period until mid-March. Reproductive activity, assessed by circulating levels of luteinizing hormone
(LH), was marginally extended (2-3 wk) in the experimental groups. In a second experiment, two groups of ovary-intact ewes
were exposed to photoperiodic treatments shortly after the winter solstice. A control group was held on the winter solstice
day length (10L:14D) until the end of the study in mid-March. The experimental group experienced a 3-h photoperiodic reduction
to 7L:17D. It remained to determine if that abrupt decrease could maintain reproductive induction. Again, the cessation of
reproductive induction was marginally delayed in the experimental group (2-3 wk). This marginal delay in the arrest of reproductive
activity seen in both experiments indicates that the lack of decrease in day length around and after the winter solstice may
play some role in timing the end of the breeding season. However, our inability to prevent or markedly delay the termination
of reproductive activity leads to the conclusion that the primary reason for the transition into anestrus is an obligatory
turn-off. This obligatory process may be the expression of an underlying endogenous rhythm of reproduction. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod39.2.254 |