The aim of this experiment was to investigate the effects of dietary protein and energy on ovulation rate and embryo survival to day 8 of pregnancy, and the associated concentrations of progesterone in jugular, ovarian and uterine veins, in a Spanish breed of sheep. In mid-October, three groups of ewes were fed to provide 1.5 x (H; n = 9), 0.5 x (L; n = 12) or 0.5 x plus 7.44 g CP/MJ ME (LP; II = 8) energy requirements for maintenance of live weight from day -14 relative to a synchronized mating on day 0. A significant effect of nutrition on ovulation rate was observed (H: 2.22 +/- 0.16; L: 1.50 +/- 0.16; LP: 1.88 +/- 0.12 corpora lutea; P < 0.05). Mean LH and progesterone concentrations were affected by nutrition on day 7, L ewes showing the highest mean LH level (P < 0.01), while H ewes presented the lowest mean LH concentration and the highest mean plasma progesterone concentration(P < 0.01). Laparotomies were performed on six animals of each group on day 8 to determine the effect of nutrition on embryo development. A significantly higher percentage of embryos recovered from L and LP ewes presented an earlier stage of development (morulae or early blastocysts) (P < 0.001), while 100% embryos of ii ewes were expanded blastocysts. The ratio expanded blastocysts/corpora lutea was significantly higher in H ewes (0.86) when compared with L and LP groups together (0.57; P < 0.05). Mean progesterone concentration in the ovarian vein was 800-fold higher than mean jugular venous levels with no differences between groups. Samples from ovarian veins contralateral to corpus luteum-bearing ovaries showed mean progesterone concentrations significantly lower than samples opposite to corpus luteum (ipsilateral: 1037.84 +/- 138.45; contralateral: 30.4 +/- 11.22 ng/ml; P < 0.001). Mean progesterone concentration in the uterine vein was approximately 30-fold higher than in jugular and similar in both uterine horns and treatments. No effect of nutrition on pregnancy rate was observed (H: 89%; L: 92%; LP: 100%). These results suggest that neither dietary energy nor protein art: able to modify pregnancy rate or progesterone concentrations in ovarian and uterine veins right days after mating, However, the delay in embryo development observed in the embryos collected from L and LP ewes may give rise to compromised embryo growth and development some days later. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.