Abstract

This experiment was designed to evaluate breeding strategies involving natural service or fixed-time artificial insemination (FTAI) in Bos indicus-influenced beef heifers (n = 1456) when there were field-type management conditions. Body weights and reproductive tract scores (RTS; Scale 1–5) were obtained for heifers before assignment to one of five treatments: 1) Non-synchronized control exposed for natural service (NS), n = 299; 2) melengestrol acetate + natural service (MGA + NS; 0.5 mg/heifer/d), n = 295; 3) 14-d controlled internal drug release insert + natural service (CIDR + NS), n = 289; 4) 14-d MGA-prostaglandin F2α (PG) + FTAI, n = 295; or 5) 14-d CIDR-PG + FTAI, n = 278. Fertile bulls were placed in pastures with heifers of the three NS treatment groups for a 65-day period which began 10 days after progestin treatments (MGA or CIDR) ended. Heifers in FTAI treatment groups were administered PG (25 mg, IM) 16 days after CIDR removal or 19 days following MGA withdrawal, respectively, and FTAI was performed at 66 (CIDR-PG) or 72 h (MGA-PG) after PG. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH; 100 μg, i.m.) was administered at FTAI. Pregnancy status was determined at the end of a 65-day breeding period. Pregnancy rates on Days 21 and 65 of the breeding period differed among treatment groups based on pre-treatment pubertal status (P ≤ 0.02) and body weight (P ≤ 0.05) but did not differ by group. These data highlight the need for continued research efforts to improve reproductive management of Bos indicus-influenced females.

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