Abstract

An experiment was designed to evaluate treatments to promote ovarian follicular maturity in advance of administration of exogenous gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH; 100 μg gonadorelin) for control of the bovine estrous cycle. We hypothesized prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α; 500 μg cloprostenol) followed by an intravaginal progesterone-releasing insert (CIDR; 1.38 g progesterone) would induce greater follicle size and serum estradiol at the time of GnRH administration. Postpartum cows (n = 194) in two locations were assigned to one of five treatments based on age, days postpartum, and body condition score. Cows in Treatment 1 were treated with the standard 7-d CO-Synch + CIDR protocol: administration of GnRH and CIDR insertion on Day −10, and administration of PGF2α and CIDR removal on Day −3. Treatments 2–5 were designed in a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement, with Treatment 1 included as an additional reference. On Day −17, cows in Treatments 2–5 received a CIDR insert, either with (Treatments 2 and 3) or without (Treatments 4 and 5) administration of PGF2α at CIDR insertion. On Day −10, all cows were administered GnRH, and CIDR inserts were either removed (Treatments 2 and 4) or remained in place until Day −3 (Treatments 3 and 5). Treatment with PGF2α and CIDR in advance of GnRH (Treatments 2 and 3) resulted in increased diameter of the largest ovarian follicle (P < 0.001) and increased serum concentrations of estradiol (P < 0.0005) on Day −10. In addition, variation among cows in CL status (no CL vs. a single CL vs. multiple CL) on Day −3 tended to be decreased (P = 0.08), with cows more likely to have a single CL rather than no CL or multiple CL. Lastly, the proportion of cows expressing estrus prior to fixed-time artificial insemination tended (P = 0.08) to be improved. Results support the hypothesis that administration of PGF2α and treatment with a CIDR for 7 days prior to GnRH promotes follicular maturity in advance of GnRH administration and may provide an approach by which to enhance response of postpartum beef cows to GnRH-based estrus synchronization programs.

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