Issue |
Reprod. Nutr. Dev.
Volume 43, Number 3, May-June 2003
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 217 - 224 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/rnd:2003023 |
DOI: 10.1051/rnd:2003023
Seasonal ovulatory activity and plasma prolactin concentrations in the Spanish ibex(Capra pyrenaica hispanica) maintained in captivity
Julián Santiago-Morenoa, Amelia Gómez-Bruneta, Antonio González-Bulnesa, Benoit Malpauxb, Philippe Chemineaub, Antonio Pulido-Pastorc and Antonio López-Sebastiánaa Dpto. Reproducción Animal, SGIT-INIA, avda. Puerta de Hierro km 5.9, 28040 Madrid, Spain
b UMR INRA-CNRS-Université de Tours, Physiologie de la Reproduction et des Comportements, 37380 Nouzilly, France
c Consejería de Medio Ambiente de la Junta de Andalucía, DP de Málaga, Calle Mauricio Moro,2, Edificio Eurocom, 29006 Málaga, Spain
(Received 11 November 2002; accepted 26 February 2003)
Abstract
Seasonal changes in ovulatory activity, assessed by the measurement
of plasma progesterone and plasma prolactin concentrations were monitored
in 10 Spanish ibex females captured in the National Wildlife Reserve of
Sierra Nevada (South Spain, 37° N). Five of the 10 female ibex showed
ovulatory activity with a mean (
s.e.m.) duration of the oestrous cycle
of 19.4
1 days (range: 17-23 days). On average, the five cyclic females
weighed 28
0.9 kg. Progesterone cycles occurred only in animals older
than 4 years of age. Ovulatory activity extended from December to January.
The duration of the breeding season was 43.2
7.7 days. Ibex females
younger than 4 years of age had a body weight lower (
P < 0.01) than that
of adults and none of them displayed ovulations. Plasma concentrations
of prolactin levels were significantly affected by season (
P < 0.05),
following a trend that was roughly parallel to daylength. The highest
values occurred in the spring (119.7
21.4 ng
mL
-1) and the summer
(139.3
19.8 ng
mL
-1), the lowest values in the autumn
(26
7.4ng
mL
-1) and in the winter (19.7
3.2 ng
mL
-1).
Our results showed a very restricted breeding season, despite the fact that the Spanish
ibex originates from and lives in a temperate latitude, revealing a remarkably
good adaptation to the harsh climatic and nutritional conditions of their
mountainous habitat.
Key words: breeding season / ovulation / progesterone
Correspondence and reprints: Julián Santiago-Moreno
e-mail: moreno@inia.es
© INRA, EDP Sciences 2003