Frontiers in Marine Science (Nov 2020)

Use of Synthetic Salmon GnRH and Domperidone (Ovaprim®) in Sharks: Preparation for ex situ Conservation

  • Sang Wha Kim,
  • Won Hee Hong,
  • Won Hee Hong,
  • Se Jin Han,
  • Jun Kwon,
  • Heejun Ko,
  • Sung Bin Lee,
  • Sib Sankar Giri,
  • Sang Guen Kim,
  • Byung Yeop Kim,
  • Goo Jang,
  • Byeong Chun Lee,
  • Dong Wan Kim,
  • Se Chang Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2020.571741
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Shark populations are constantly decreasing owing to environmental destruction and overfishing; thus, sharks are now at a risk of extinction, with 27.9% of shark species classified as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List. Sharks are apex predators and a keystone species in balancing the marine food chain; their extinction will create an imbalance of the entire marine ecosystem. Assisted reproductive technology is the last resort for protecting animals facing severe extinction. Here, as a proactive effort toward building a hormone-induced artificial insemination protocol for endangered wild sharks, we identified the possibility of germ cell maturation by administration of Ovaprim®, a commercially produced synthetic salmon gonadotropin-releasing hormone, and calculated its optimum dosage and injection timing. The experiment was conducted on two shark species—Triakis scyllium and Triaenodon obesus. We found that intramuscular injections of 0.2 mL/kg of Ovaprim® for male T. scyllium and T. obesus, 0.2 mL/kg + 0.5 mL/kg at a 24 h interval for female T. scyllium, and 0.2 mL/kg + 0.2 mL/kg or 0.2 mL/kg + 0.3 mL/kg at a 24 h interval for female T. obesus were optimal dose protocols. These doses effectively induced the maturation and ovulation of oocytes and the release of semen. Our results confirm that Ovaprim® is a suitable tool for shark hormone-induced artificial insemination and indicate that this method may enable the conservation of the endangered shark species.

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