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United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Series

Reproduction

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Effects Of Xenobiotics And Phytotoxins On Reproduction In Food Animals, Kip E. Panter, Bryan L. Stegelmeier Jul 2011

Effects Of Xenobiotics And Phytotoxins On Reproduction In Food Animals, Kip E. Panter, Bryan L. Stegelmeier

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

The influence of natural toxicants and anthropogenic compounds on reproduction in food animals is significant in its economic impact, and the subject requires more research and further experimental substantiation. Confounding factors such as stress, nutritional status, season of the year, animal species involved, genetic variability, disease conditions, management factors, and so forth exacerbate the difficulty of making an accurate diagnosis and thereby may impede progress to improve reproductive performance on an individual operation. The interaction between the reproductive system and xenobiotics (reproductive toxicology) is a relatively new area of study and a subject of increasing interest, especially in the area …


Reproductive Status Of Holstein And Jersey Cows In The United States, H. D. Norman, J. R. Wright, S. M. Hubbard, R. H. Miller, J. L. Hutchison Jan 2009

Reproductive Status Of Holstein And Jersey Cows In The United States, H. D. Norman, J. R. Wright, S. M. Hubbard, R. H. Miller, J. L. Hutchison

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Reproductive information since 1995 from the USDA national dairy database was used to calculate yearly Holstein and Jersey means for days to first breeding after calving (DFB), 70-d nonreturn rate, conception rate (CR), number of breedings per lactation (NB), interval between first and last breedings during the lactation, days to last breeding after calving (DLB), pregnancy rate (PR), calving interval (CI), and interval between consecutive breedings. Data were from nearly 20 million breedings during >8 million lactations of >5 million cows in >23,000 herds. Means were also calculated for some traits by parity and breeding number for both breeds and …


Herbivory Alters Resource Allocation And Compensation In The Invasive Tree Melaleuca Quinquenervia, P. D. Pratt, M. B. Rayamajhi, T. K. Van, T. D. Center, P. W. Tipping Jan 2005

Herbivory Alters Resource Allocation And Compensation In The Invasive Tree Melaleuca Quinquenervia, P. D. Pratt, M. B. Rayamajhi, T. K. Van, T. D. Center, P. W. Tipping

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

The Australian native Melaleuca quinquenervia is highly invasive in the Florida Everglades, U.S.A., where it experiences limited competition or herbivory from native species, making it a likely candidate for compensation. The introduced biological control agent Oxyops vitiosa feeds exclusively on the seasonal flushes of developing foliage at branch apices, which represents ~ 15% of the total foliar biomass.


Identification Of Quantitative Trait Loci Affecting Female Reproductive Traits In A Multigeneration Meishan-White Composite Swine Population, G. A. Rohrer, J. J. Ford, T. H. Wise, J. L. Vallet, R. K. Christenson May 1999

Identification Of Quantitative Trait Loci Affecting Female Reproductive Traits In A Multigeneration Meishan-White Composite Swine Population, G. A. Rohrer, J. J. Ford, T. H. Wise, J. L. Vallet, R. K. Christenson

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

A multigeneration crossbred Meishan- White composite resource population was used to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) for age at first estrus (AP) and the components of litter size: ovulation rate (OR; number of ova released in an estrous period) and uterine capacity (UC). The population was established by reciprocally mating Meishan (ME) and White composite (WC) pigs. Resultant F1 females were mated to either ME or WC boars to produce backcross progeny (BC) of either ¾ WC ¼ ME or ¼ WC ¾ ME. To produce the next generation (F3) , ¾ WC ¼ ME animals were mated …


Increased Lamb Production With Rams Exposed To Short Daylengths During The Nonbreeding Season, B. D. Schanbacher Jan 1979

Increased Lamb Production With Rams Exposed To Short Daylengths During The Nonbreeding Season, B. D. Schanbacher

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Exposure of rams during the nonbreeding season (anestrous period) to short daylengths will initiate a new sexual cycle characterized by testicular growth, increased mating activity and improved semen quality. Lambing results accumulated from 300 potential matings indicate that rams exposed to artificial photoperiods of 8 hr light and 16 hr darkness for 10 weeks (referred to as rams on short-days) are more fertile than control rams maintained under the relatively long days of spring. When five control rams were penned individually with 30 ewes synchronized with progestogen and PMSG, 67% of the ewes were mated. Eighty-nine percent of the ewes …


Acute And Chronic Effects Of Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone On Reproductive Characteristics Of Rams During The Nonbreeding Season, B. D. Schanbacher, D. D. Lunstra Jan 1977

Acute And Chronic Effects Of Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone On Reproductive Characteristics Of Rams During The Nonbreeding Season, B. D. Schanbacher, D. D. Lunstra

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Acute and chronic effects of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) administration on reproductive characteristics of 32 rams have been assessed during the nonbreeding season. Rams injected intramuscularly with 50 µg of GnRH had elevated (P<.01)concentrations of serum testosterone and noticeably higher (60%) mating activities when compared to control animals injected with saline. Daily injections of GnRH resulted not only in higher testosterone concentrations and mating activity, but also in increased testes size (P<.05). The apparent change in testicular function may account for the improvement in semen quality which was observed in these animals. Although benefits were only slight for percentages of live sperm, normal sperm and sperm with normal acrosomes, sperm motility was markedly increased (P<.05).

These data suggest that reproductive performance in rams is related to testicular androgen secretion and that a spring decline in those characteristics normally associated with high fertility in the male can be lessened by chronic treatment with GnRH.