Abstract

Previous studies demonstrated that waves of follicular activity develop approximately every 9 d in cattle during the estrous cycle and early pregnancy. A dominant follicle develops from each wave and the remaining follicles (subordinates) begin to regress after a few days. In this study, intraovarian luteal and follicular interrelationships were examined during the follicular waves of the estrous cycle and pregnancy using data obtained by ultrasonography. During the estrous cycle, no intraovarian relationships were found between the ovary containing the corpus luteum and the ovary containing the dominant follicle (n = 165), or between the location of the corpus luteum and the characteristics of the dominant follicle. During pregnancy, however, the frequency distribution for the number of follicular waves with the dominant follicle and corpus luteum on the same or opposite ovaries differed (P<0.05) among Waves 1 to 10. The two structures (dominant follicle and corpus luteum) were more often in opposite ovaries during Waves 3 to 10 (combined frequency, 75%) than during Waves 1 and 2. During pregnancy, dominant follicles of consecutive waves differed (P<0.05) among Waves 1 to 8 in the frequency with which they appeared in the same versus the opposite ovary. The difference seemed primarily due to an increased frequency of consecutive follicles on the same ovary for Waves 4 to 8 (combined frequency, 80%). During both the estrous cycle and pregnancy, there was no significant intraovarian effect of the dominant follicle on the day of detection of the next dominant follicle, on the growth rate of the largest subordinate follicle, or on the length of the interval from wave origin to cessation of growth of the largest subordinate; these results indicate that previously postulated suppressive effects between follicles are exerted through systemic channels.

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