Abstract
In Canada, brucellosis and tuberculosis threaten an estimated 4500 wood bison (Bison bison athabascae), a species considered at risk by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife In Canada (COSEWIC). To help rescue this species, our Wood Bison Reproductive Research group proposes to employ advanced reproductive technologies. Unfortunately, little is known about the reproductive physiology of the wood bison, which hinders the application of these reproductive technologies. In order to modify advanced reproductive techniques developed in cattle for use in wood bison, the large amounts of semen, embryos, and oocytes from wood bison required are not available. The purpose of this study was to compare semen collected from the more abundant and closely related plains bison (Bison bison bison) with that of wood bison. Semen from 3 wood and 4 plains bison were collected by electro-ejaculation during the summer of 2007. Andrological parameters of morphology and motility were recorded on fresh semen, extended semen, and post-thawed semen samples. A Student's t-test was used to compare the results of these two groups. Semen was cryopreserved using two commercially available cryopreservation media (Andromed and Triladyl, Minitube Canada, Ingersoll, Ontario, Canada). Sperm morphology and motility were not different between electro-ejaculated samples from plains and wood bison (P > 0.05). Also, no difference was found in the survival rate of sperm from the electro-ejaculated samples between plains and wood bison after freezing and then thawing using an egg-yolk based extender (Triladyl) or an extender containing no products of animal origin (Andromed). A difference between cryopreservation media was found; post-thaw motility of Triladyl-treated sperm was higher (29%) than that of the Andromed-treated sperm (12%). Due to lack of previous success with preserving electro-ejaculated semen in media free of animal-origin products, motility assays were performed to evaluate if spermatozoa retrieved from epididymides of plains bison can be cryopreserved in Andromed. Interestingly, cyropreserved epididymal spermatozoa had a higher motility than cryopreserved electro-ejaculated sperm after freezing-thawing procedures using a medium containing no products of source animal (respectively, 30% v. 7%). This result suggests that there may be a factor secreted by the reproductive accessory glands that interferes with the post-thaw survivability of bison sperm. In conclusion, this study supports the hypothesis that semen from plains bison behaves similarly to that of wood bison semen during cryopreservation and therefore could be used to establish protocols for advanced reproductive technologies in wood bison. This project was supported by Canadian Adaptation and Rural Development in Saskatchewan.
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