Abstract

Transplantation of testes between isogenic rainbow trout males has been recently demonstrated. The objective of the present investigation was to determine if ovaries detached from the body wall and removed from the abdominal cavity would reestablish themselves when autografted to an ectopic site. In the first experiment, eleven sexually immature, female rainbow trout were laparotomized midventrally, and the right ovary was removed and transplanted to the abdominal cavity and positioned along the pyloric cecae on the right side. In the second experiment, the ovary was autografted in four animals as in experiment 1 or was transferred to and allografted in four other sexually immature female trout. The animals were examined three months following surgery. At the termination of experiment 1, the autografted ovaries were present in 73% of the animals; the transplanted ovaries were smaller in size than the intact control ovaries. Histological examination did not reveal any necrotic tissue in these transplanted gonads, and oocyte development was not different between the transplanted and the intact ovary within animal. Transplanted ovaries allografted from another female were not found. Taken together, these data support the conclusion that rainbow trout ovaries detached from the body wall can reestablish their blood supply and maintain ovarian development and that female trout appear to reject gonadal tissue from other individuals of their species.

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