Abstract
Female guinea-pigs were naturally or artificially inseminated before or after ovulation and the distribution of spermatozoa in the oviducts and the time of sperm penetration into the eggs were determined. When animals were inseminated before ovulation, the spermatozoa stayed in the distal half of the oviduct until about the time of ovulation. Only a very few spermatozoa were present in the proximal half of the oviduct at the time of ovulation, but these were sufficient to effect fertilization. When animals were inseminated after ovulation, the spermatozoa ascended the oviduct faster than when animals were inseminated before ovulation, and fertilization commenced in 4 hr. Regardless of the time of insemination, the spermatozoa participating in fertilization appeared to undergo the acrosome reaction after they reached the proximal part of the oviduct or when they were very near the eggs.
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