Abstract
The objectives were to determine if relative lengths of photoperiods that induce reproductive cycles in ewes affect the length of the subsequent breeding season, if duration of the refractoriness that terminates breeding is affected by photoperiod length, and if the resulting refractoriness to an inductive photoperiod is absolute. Groups of Welsh Mountain ewes were exposed to either 12L:12D (n = 12) or 8L:16D (n = 6) photoperiods beginning at the summer solstice when daylengths reach a maximum of 17.5 h at Bristol, England. A control group (n = 10) was exposed to natural daylengths. Ovarian cycles in the controls, as judged by monitored plasma progesterone levels, commenced in early October, about 1 mo later (p less than 0.001 in both cases) than in sheep exposed to 12L:12D or 8L:16D. The advancement in cycle onset was similar under 12L:12D and 8L:16D (69 +/- 2 and 77 +/- 4 days after the summer solstice compared with 102 +/- 2 days in the controls). Duration of the breeding season (100 +/- 4 days) in ewes exposed to 12L:12D was significantly shorter (p less than 0.001 in both cases) than in ewes exposed to natural daylengths or 8L:16D (153 +/- 3 and 133 +/- 5 days, respectively). Approximately 70 days after the ending of ovulatory cycles in the 12L:12D group, half of the animals (n = 6) were transferred to 8L:16D. This treatment greatly (p less than 0.001) reduced the duration of anestrus and cycles began again 62 +/- 4 days after transfer to 8L:16D, or about 90 days earlier than in ewes (n = 6) remaining in 12L:12D.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Nicholls, T. J., Jackson, G. L., & Follett, B. K. (1989). Reproductive refractoriness in the Welsh Mountain ewe induced by a short photoperiod can be overridden by exposure to a shorter photoperiod. Biology of Reproduction, 40(1), 81–86. https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod40.1.81
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