Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux (Feb 2000)

Using modern reproductive technologies such as embryo transfer and artificial insemination to improve the reproductive potential of dromedary camels

  • J. A. Skidmore,
  • A. M. Billah,
  • W. R. Allen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9759
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 2
pp. 97 – 100

Abstract

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Initial experiments evaluated the optimum extender for camel semen. Ejaculates collected from male camels were diluted 1:1 with green buffer, Laciphos or skim-milk glucose extender. Then a total of 300 x 10^6 live sperm were inseminated into each female camel that had been induced to ovulate with 20 µg of the GnRH analogue buserelin given 24 h previously. Pregnancy was confirmed in 47, 53 and 0% of females inseminated with semen diluted in green buffer, Laciphos and skim-milk extender, respectively. In experiment 2, donor camels were superovulated with a combination of 20 i.u. porcine FSH and 2500 i.u. equine chorionic gonadotrophin, and those that responded were mated to a chosen male when the majority of follicles had reached 1.3-1.8 cm in diameter. Their uteri were flushed non-surgically eight days after mating (day 7 after ovulation). The recovered embryos were either directly transferred singly into recipient camels at different levels of synchrony with respect to the day 7 donor (+1 to -3 days; n = 58), or cooled in embryo flushing media for 24 h in an Equitainer at 4°C before being transferred singly into recipient camels (n = 32) on day 6 after ovulation. The pregnancy rate increased to a maximum of 67% when the recipient was synchronized at one day behind the donor and it fell dramatically when the level of asynchrony increased to +1 (9%) or -3 (10%) days. Of the 32 recipients to which cooled embryos were transferred, 20 (63%) were confirmed pregnant at 18-20 days after ovulation to give a success rate similar to that attained with the control fresh embryos (67%)

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