Abstract

The effects of postpartum energy intake, restricted suckling, and cow-calf isolation on concentrations of LH, FSH, growth hormone, and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and on postpartum anestrous interval were determined by randomly allocating beef cows with a mean body condition score of 2.3 +/- 0.1 to receive either 80 MJ metabolizable energy (low-energy diet [L]; n = 51) or 120 MJ metabolizable energy (high-energy diet [H]; n = 52) per cow per day from calving. At 30 days postpartum, cows within diet were randomized to 1) have continued full access to their calves from birth to weaning (ad libitum suckling: ADLIB), 2) be suckled once-daily with their calves penned adjacent (restricted suckling, adjacent: RESADJ), 3) be isolated from all calves except for a once-daily suckling period (restricted suckling, isolated: RESISO). The mean postpartum interval was similar (p > 0.10) for L and H cows (62 and 63 days, respectively). RESADJ cows had a shorter (p < 0.05) postpartum interval than ADLIB cows, and RESISO cows had a shorter interval (p < 0.05) than RESADJ cows, with all effects independent (p > 0.10) of diet. FSH secretion pattern was not affected by diet, suckling treatment, sequential follicle wave number, or follicle wave retrospectively realigned to emergence of first ovulatory wave. Within 5 days of suckling restriction and calf isolation, the number of LH pulses increased from 0.18 to 0.48 pulses per hour (p < 0.05). Both mean LH and the mean number of LH pulses increased linearly (p < 0.01) during the six follicle waves up to the first ovulatory wave. From 80 days before, until the time of, first ovulation, growth hormone decreased (p < 0.05) while IGF-I increased (p < 0.05), irrespective of treatment. The results indicate that the "suckling effect" in beef cows is the major factor affecting the duration of the postpartum interval and suggests that the maternal bond is more important than suckling in regulating LH pulse frequency, the key endocrine factor determining whether or not a dominant follicles ovulates. Removal of the suckling effect resulted in a rapid increase in LH pulse frequency, which was not dependent on level of postpartum nutrition, at least within the nutritional limits of this study. Mean concentrations of FSH, unlike LH, did not vary with follicle wave number, suggesting that lack of FSH is not a major factor delaying the resumption of ovulation in postpartum beef cows.

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