Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to develop protocols for the use of fixed-time artificial insemination and embryo transfer (TAI and TET, respectively) to increase beef cattle productivity. Suckled beef cows were given GnRH (100 µg im) on Day − 10, and PGF (25 mg im) on Day − 3, with TAI on Day 0 (66 h later), and assigned to either embryo recipient (ER) or no embryo (NR) treatments on Days 6 or 7. Semen from Gelbvieh (GB) beef sires was used for TAI; sexed-male in vivo developed Holstein embryos (HO) were placed nonsurgically (TET) into the uterine horn contralateral to the corpus luteum. In Experiment 1, ovarian status of cows ( n = 111; 69 ± 11 d postpartum; mean ± SD on Day 0) in Groups I and II was presynchronized with a single PGF treatment on Day − 24; Groups II and III received GnRH concurrent with TAI, and ER ( n = 78) were selected from all groups on Days 6 or 7. Neither presynchronization nor GnRH affected rates of recipient selection, Day 45 pregnancy (43.2, 43.2, and 54.0% for Groups I, II and III, respectively), or calving (40.5, 37.8, and 43.2%). However, treatment with GnRH increased HO-birth rate (8.0, 14.0 and 24.0%; P < 0.05). In Experiment 2, cows ( n = 99, 113 ± 10 d postpartum) were assigned on Day 7 to NR and ER, with and without hCG (2500 IU im), following a TAI protocol (as per Group III in Experiment 1). Treatment with hCG increased reproductive rate (1.16 vs 1.44 calves/calving; P < 0.05), but had no significant effect on rates of Day 45 pregnancy (45.3 vs 41.3%), calving (31.2 vs 37.0%) or HO-births (20.0 vs 26.0%). In summary, GnRH-based synchronization rates were 71.2% (based on circulating progesterone concentrations that were < 1.0 ng/mL on Day 0 and ≥ 1.0 ng/mL on Day 7); TET did not affect GB-birth rate, but more calves were produced by ER than NR cows (1.43 vs 1.02 calves/calving; P < 0.01); and weaned calf production was 53% greater for twin- than singleton-suckled cows (392 ± 25 vs 256 ± 11 kg/dam; mean ± SEM, P < 0.05). Therefore, GnRH-based TAI and TET protocols for mixed-breed twin production increased beef cow productivity.

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