Abstract

The objective was to compare conception rates to embryo transfer relative to AI, during summer heat stress, in lactating dairy cows. Holstein cows (n=180; 50 to 120 d postpartum) were allocated randomly to 1 of 3 groups: artificial insemination (AI, n=84), embryo transfer using either embryos collected from superovulated donors (ET- DON, n=48), or embryos produced in vitro (ET-IVF, n=48). Embryos from superovulated donors were frozen in 10 % glycerol and were rehydrated in a 3-step procedure, in decreasing concentrations of glycerol in a sucrose medium before transfer. Embryos produced in vitro were frozen in 1.5 M ethylene glycol, thawed and transferred without rehydration. Blood samples were collected from AI and ET recipients on Days 0, 7 and 22 for measurement of progesterone in plasma. Conception rate was estimated for the three groups at Day 22 (progesterone>1 ng/mL) and confirmed at Day 42 by palpation per rectum. Conception rate estimates at Day 22 did not differ among groups (AI, 60.7%; ET-DON, 60.4%; ET-IW, 54.2%), but conception rates at Day 42 differed (AI, 21.4%; ET-DON, 35.4%; ET-IW, 18.8%; AI versus ET: P>0.10 and ET-DON versus ET-IVF: P<0.05). In cows considered pregnant at 22 d but diagnosed open at 42 d, the interestrous intervals were 28.8± 2.2, 35.2± 3.5 and 31.6±2.9 d, respectively, for AI, ET-DON and ET-IVF groups. Transfer of embryos collected from nonheat-stressed superovulated donors significantly increased conception rates in heat stressed dairy cattle. However, transfer of IVF-derived embryos had no advantage over AI. Where appropriate mechanisms are in place to attenuate the effects of heat stress, embryo transfer using frozen-thawed donor embryos increases conception rates.

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