Abstract
The productivity of breeding colonies of Mongolian gerbils can be substantially enhanced by using as breeding stock only the 40% of females that exhibit vaginal opening before reaching 25 days of age. Early-maturing females are more likely to breed successfully on first pairing. The lifetime fecundity of early-maturing females is more than twice that of their late-maturing sisters. In those cases in which early-maturing females fail to breed with the first male with which they are paired, they (but not late-maturing females) can be mated with a second male with a high probability of success. Two-thirds of the early-maturing females that failed to reproduce following a first pairing became pregnant following a second. Only 11% of late-maturing females did so. © 1986, Royal Society of Medicine Press. All rights reserved.
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Clark, M. M., Spencer, C. A., & Galef, B. G. (1986). Improving the productivity of breeding colonies of Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus). Laboratory Animals, 20(4), 313–315. https://doi.org/10.1258/002367786780808730
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