Abstract

The fertility rate for goats following artificial insemination (AI) is usually analyzed according to herd or treatment groups. However, these general information are insufficient to allow identification of specific factors which affect this individual reproductive performance. In the present experiment 640 dairy goats were used to analyze to what extent the interval from sponge removal to estrus affects the results of AI, performed at a predetermined time following sponge removal. Estrus occurred in 98.1% of experimental animals between 24 and 72 hours after sponge removal. The fertility rate was lower for goats that came into estrus later than 30 hours after sponge removal (33.3%, n = 108 than for goats that exhibited estrus earlier (65.0%, n = 520; P<0.001). The occurrence of late estrus is not age dependent, but it increases with the number of treatments that an individual animal has previously received. These results show that the low fertility rate observed in some herds after synchronization of estrus and AI may be related to the high proportion of goats with a late occurrence of estrus, and this phenomenon increases in animals that are treated repeatedly.

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