Abstract

Dissections were made of 16-day-pregnant female mice with the object of discovering the developmental stage at which litter size is reduced by inbreeding. Counts were made of the numbers of corpora lutea, implantation sites, and live embryos, and comparisons were made between females with inbreeding coefficients of 50–60% and non-inbred females. Except in one group the embryos were all non-inbred, so that the comparisons showed the effect of inbreeding in the mother of the litter. No influence of inbreeding in the male parent was found.The only difference found between inbred and non-inbred females was in the number of eggs or embryos lost before implantation. The greater pre-implantation loss in inbred females was enough to account for the smaller number of young born alive in their litters.There was no difference between the inbred and non-inbred females in the ovulation rate, measured by the number of corpora lutea, or in the post-implantation mortality of the embryos.There was a positive correlation between ovulation rate and weight at 6 weeks. For reasons explained in the Discussion, the inbred females did not differ in weight from the non-inbred females. If, under other conditions, the weight declined on inbreeding, the ovulation rate would be expected to decline also.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call