Abstract

Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) was given to 109 cows and heifers during the course of 224 superovulations. Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) was administered twice daily (5 or 6 mg) for 3.5 to 4 days beginning on any of Days 9 to 14 of the estrous cycle; prostaglandin (45 mg PGF2α or 750 ug cloprostenol) was given in a split dose on the fourth day. Donor cows and heifers were placed into four groups according to previous superovulation treatments, which consisted of one to three treatments or of no previous treatment. Every other cow or heifer within each of the four subgroups was treated with GnRH (200 μg i.m.) at standing estrus. Only donors that exhibited estrus within 32 to 72 h after the first prostaglandin treatment were used in the study. Animals were inseminated artificially 12 and 24 h after standing estrus was first observed.No differences were noted in the number of ovulations, total ova or transferable embryos recovered from the GnRH or control groups; however, two interactions were detected. Cows given GnRH had fewer palpable corpora lutea than control cows (P < 0.05), but this difference was not seen in heifers. The second interaction was that GnRH seemed to depress ovulation rate in donors not previously superovulated, but this effect was not observed with subsequent superovulations. Cows yielded more total ova than heifers (P < 0.01). There was no difference in return to estrus between GnRH and control groups after a second prostaglandin treatment at the time of embryo recovery. Most donors within each group resumed cycling between 5 and 12 d after embryo recovery.

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