Clinical relevance of pre-ovulatory follicular temperature in heat-stressed lactating dairy cows

被引:43
|
作者
Lopez-Gatius, F. [1 ,2 ]
Hunter, R. H. F. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lleida, Agrotecnio Ctr, Lleida, Spain
[2] Transfer Bovine Reprod SLu, Barbastro, Spain
[3] Univ Cambridge, Sidney Sussex Coll, Cambridge, England
[4] Ladfield, Jedburgh, Scotland
关键词
dairy cattle; heat stress; temperature gradients; reproductive tissues; ovulation failure; NORTHEASTERN SPAIN; FERTILITY; CATTLE; INSEMINATION; MATURATION; CONCEPTION; GRADIENTS; TISSUES;
D O I
10.1111/rda.12916
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Contents Temperature gradients in female reproductive tissues seem to influence the success of key processes such as ovulation and fertilization. The objective of this study was to investigate whether pre-ovulatory follicles are cooler than neighbouring uterine tissue and deep rectal temperatures in lactating dairy cows under heat stress conditions. Temperatures within the pre-ovulatory follicle, on the uterine adjacent surface and 20cm deep within rectum, were measured using fine thermistor probes within 45min after sunrise (dawn). Cows were selected from synchronized groups for fixed-time insemination during the warm period of the year. Five cows under direct sun radiation and 11 cows in the shade were included in the study. None of the cows in the sun area ovulated within 24hr, whereas 10 of the 11 cows in the sun area ovulated. Four of the 10 ovulating cows became pregnant. In the ovulating cows, follicular temperatures were 0.74 and 1.54 degrees C significantly cooler than uterine surface and rectal temperatures, respectively, whereas temperatures in the uterine area were 0.80 degrees C significantly cooler than rectal temperatures. No significant differences among temperatures were found in non-ovulating cows. Follicular size was similar for ovulating and non-ovulating cows. Environmental temperatures in the shade area were 6.4 degrees C significantly lower than those in the sun area. Results of this study indicate that pre-ovulatory follicles are cooler than neighbouring uterine tissue and deep rectal temperatures and those temperature gradients were not found in cows suffering ovulation failure.
引用
收藏
页码:366 / 370
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Chromium supplementation modulates glucose metabolism in heat-stressed Girolando dairy cows
    Ribeiro, Lilian dos Santos
    Brandao, Felipe Zandonadi
    Carvalheira, Luciano de Rezende
    de Lemos, Diana Rangel
    de Souza, Gustavo Torres
    Tavares Pereira Batista, Ribrio Ivan
    de Almeida Camargo, Luiz Sergio
    de Carvalho, Bruno Campos
    SEMINA-CIENCIAS AGRARIAS, 2020, 41 (05): : 2445 - 2452
  • [32] Follicular dynamics during the pre-ovulatory and subsequent first follicular wave stages affect the pregnancy outcome in Japanese Black cows
    Yoshiyama, Tsumugi
    Kanazawa, Tomomi
    Takahashi, Toru
    JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 67 (06): : 345 - 351
  • [33] The effects of dietary ThermalCare-R (TCR) on body temperature indices, production and metabolism in heat-stressed lactating cows
    Rhoads, R. P.
    Skrzypek, M. V.
    Block, S. S.
    Baumgard, L. H.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2010, 93 : 413 - 413
  • [34] CONTINUOUS RESPIRATION RATE MEASUREMENT OF HEAT-STRESSED DAIRY COWS AND RELATION TO ENVIRONMENT, BODY TEMPERATURE, AND LYING TIME
    Atkins, I. K.
    Cook, N. B.
    Mondaca, M. R.
    Choi, C. Y.
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASABE, 2018, 61 (05) : 1475 - 1485
  • [35] Factors affecting pre-ovulatory follicular diameter and ovulation rate following GnRH administration in anestrous beef cows
    Atkins, J. A.
    Geary, T. W.
    Wells, K. J.
    Lucy, M. C.
    Smith, M. F.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2007, 90 : 158 - 158
  • [36] Plasma-based proteomics reveals immune response, complement and coagulation cascades pathway shifts in heat-stressed lactating dairy cows
    Min, Li
    Cheng, Jianbo
    Zhao, Shengguo
    Tian, He
    Zhang, Yangdong
    Li, Songli
    Yang, Hongjian
    Zheng, Nan
    Wang, Jiaqi
    JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS, 2016, 146 : 99 - 108
  • [38] Cooling and dietary crude protein affected milk production on heat-stressed dairy cows
    Kaufman, Jeffrey D.
    Bailey, Hannah R.
    Kennedy, Amanda M.
    Loffler, Frank E.
    Rius, Agustin G.
    LIVESTOCK SCIENCE, 2020, 240
  • [39] Effect of cooling heat-stressed dairy cows during the dry period on insulin response
    Tao, S.
    Thompson, I. M.
    Monteiro, A. P. A.
    Hayen, M. J.
    Young, L. J.
    Dahl, G. E.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2012, 95 (09) : 5035 - 5046
  • [40] Effects of antioxidant supplementation on metabolism and inflammatory biomarkers in heat-stressed dairy cows.
    Abeyta, M. A.
    Al-Qaisi, M.
    Horst, E. A.
    Mayorga, E. J.
    Rodriguez-Jimenez, S. J.
    Goetz, B. M.
    Carta, S.
    Tucker, H.
    Baumgard, L. H.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2020, 103 : 67 - 67