Lambing rates and litter sizes following intrauterine or cervical insemination of frozen/thawed semen with or without oxytocin administration
Intrauterine insemination by laparoscopy is required to achieve acceptable lambing rates in ewes when using frozen semen but the procedure has evoked welfare concerns. Oxytocin has been used to dilate the cervix as a means of accessing the uterus during conventional cervical insemination, but its ef...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Theriogenology 2004-10, Vol.62 (7), p.1236-1244 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Intrauterine insemination by laparoscopy is required to achieve acceptable lambing rates in ewes when using frozen semen but the procedure has evoked welfare concerns. Oxytocin has been used to dilate the cervix as a means of accessing the uterus during conventional cervical insemination, but its effect on fertility is not well documented. Three hundred crossbred ewes were synchronised in estrus and randomly allocated to one of three insemination procedures using frozen/thawed semen containing 400×10
6/ml progressively motile sperm: single cervical (0.2
ml), multiple cervical (4×0.05
ml) or laparoscopic (0.05
ml per uterine horn). The effects of each insemination procedure on lambing rate (percentage of treated ewes lambing) and litter size (lambs per ewe lambing) were tested with and without oxytocin (10
IU given i.m.) prior to fixed-time insemination. Oxytocin did not permit complete cervical penetration in any ewes and neither lambing rate nor litter size was influenced by the number of inseminations. Lambing percentages were 69 and 42 (
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ISSN: | 0093-691X 1879-3231 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2004.01.009 |