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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 75, Issue 5 1343-1350, Copyright © 1997 by American Society of Animal Science


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fertility in estrus-cycling and noncycling virgin heifers and suckled beef cows after induced ovulation

J. S. Stevenson, D. P. Hoffman, D. A. Nichols, R. M. McKee and C. L. Krehbiel
Department of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State University, Manhattan 66506-0201, USA. jstevens@oz.oz-net.ksu.edu

A procedure was developed to either induce or synchronize ovulation in heifers and suckled cows. Beef females were assigned to two breeding programs: 1) two injections of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF2alpha) given 14 d apart to synchronize estrus (PGF2alpha control; n = 179), with inseminations 12 to 16 h after detected estrus or at 80 h in the absence of estrus, or 2) two injections of PGF2alpha (d -14 and 0) plus 100 microg of GnRH on d -7 when 6 mg of norgestomet was implanted (PGF2alpha/NORG/GnRH treatment; n = 173). Implants were removed 24 h after the second PGF2alpha injection (d +1) and females were inseminated 12 to 16 h after detected estrus until 54 h after PGF2alpha. The remaining cattle were given a second 100-microg GnRH injection 54 h after PGF2alpha and inseminated 18 to 20 h later. Percentages of noncycling females with subsequently elevated progesterone (P4) on d 0 or +1 were not different between treatment groups (20.4 vs 25%), but conception rate was greater (P < .05) in noncycling treated females than in noncycling controls (55 vs 12.8%). Conception rates in cycling (59.2%) and noncycling (62.2%) treated females were similar to those in cycling controls (56.2%) but greater (P = .06) than those in noncycling controls (26.5%). Conception rates in treated females inseminated 12 to 16 h after detected estrus (63.1%) or at one fixed time (58.3%) were similar to those in controls inseminated 12 to 16 h after detected estrus (68.7%). This treatment procedure produced fertility after one timed insemination that was equal to controls inseminated after detected estrus and induced equally fertile ovulations in noncycling heifers and cows.


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A. M. Richardson, B. A. Hensley, T. J. Marple, S. K. Johnson, and J. S. Stevenson
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Copyright © 1997 by the American Society of Animal Science.