210 resultados para Estrus
em Repositório Institucional UNESP - Universidade Estadual Paulista "Julio de Mesquita Filho"
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Estrous behavior and the estrus-to-ovulation interval are essential for estimating the best time to artificially inseminate cattle. Because these parameters are not well characterized in the Nelore breed (Bos indicus), the main purpose of the this study was to determine the estrus-to-ovulation interval in Nelore heifers and cows with natural estrus or with estrus induced by treatments with PGF2 alpha or norgestomet and estradiol valerate (NEV). The cows and heifers were observed continuously (24 h a day) to determine the onset of estrus and to study estrous behavior in the cows. Ten hours after the start of estrus the ovaries were scanned every 2 h by ultrasonography to monitor the dominant follicle until ovulation. Blood samples were collected periodically to determine progesterone levels by RIA. Administration of PGF2 alpha (2 injections, 11 days apart) did not induce estrus in most Nelore females in spite of the presence of functional CL, indicated by progesterone concentrations above 6.0 ng/ml in 25 of 28 animals. Treatment with NEV induced high sexual receptivity in cows (10/11), but only 66% ovulated. Cows with natural or induced estrus exhibited behavioral estrus of 10.9 +/- 1.4 h, and ovulation occurred 26.6 +/- 0.44 h (n = 26) after the onset of estrus. In most of the cows (53.8%) estrus began at night (between 1801 and 600 h), and 34.6% it started and finished during the night. It is concluded that in Nelore females ovulation occurs approximately 26 h after the onset of estrus. Additionally, estrous behavior is shorter than in European breeds, and there is a high incidence of estrus at night, which makes it difficult to detect and, consequently, impairs Al in Nelore cattle. The observation that a high percentage of Nelore females with an active CL did not respond to usual dosages of PGF2 alpha warrants further investigation. (C) 1998 by Elsevier B.V.
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Thirteen cows, Bos indicus, of the Nellore breed were superovulated with 22 mg of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) administered by intramuscular route during four consecutive days (D10, D11, D12 and D13), starting on the 10th day of the estrous cycle (day 0 = estrus). Prostaglandin (PGF2alpha, 1.0 mg, im) was administered on D12, 48 h after the first FSH injection, for the induction of estrus on D14, when artificial insemination was performed. Seven days later (D21 of the cycle), embryos were collected, and evaluated, and the ovarian response was estimated on the basis of number of corpora lutea determined by rectal palpation. Blood samples were obtained for the determination of plasma 17-beta estradiol on D10, D11, D12, D13, D14 and D21 and plasma progesterone on D14 by RIA. The donors were divided into two groups according to progesterone levels on D14, the day of the induced estrus (GI: P4 less-than-or-equal-to 1.00 ng/ml, N = 5 and GII: P4 > 1.00 ng/ml, N = 8). A linear positive correlation was observed between plasma 17-beta estradiol concentration on the day of estrus and viable embryo number. We conclude that plasma 17-beta estradiol and progesterone concentrations on the day of estrus can be used to predict the viability of embryos recovered from Nellore cows superovulated with FSH.