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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Effect of body condition and melatonin implants, inserted at different times of the year, on ovarian activity in goats maintained without male contact from the time of implantation

María de Lourdes Gallego-Calvo A , María Carolina Gatica B , José Luis Guzmán A and Luis A. Zarazaga A C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Departamento de Ciencias Agroforestales, Universidad de Huelva, ‘Campus de Excelencia Internacional Agroalimentario, ceiA3’, Carretera Huelva-Palos de la Frontera s/n, 21819 Palos de la Frontera, Huelva, Spain.

B Universidad Arturo Prat, Avenuenida Arturo Prat, 2120 Iquique, Chile.

C Corresponding author. Email: zarazaga@uhu.es

Animal Production Science 59(6) 1048-1055 https://doi.org/10.1071/AN18046
Submitted: 24 November 2017  Accepted: 11 May 2018   Published: 9 August 2018

Abstract

The aim of the present work was to asses (1) whether body condition (BC) and (2) melatonin implants, inserted at different times of the year between the winter and summer solstices, have an effect on seasonal ovulatory activity in goats without presence of males. Sixty-six Blanca Andaluza does were divided into six groups. Five of these received a melatonin implant on either 18 December (n = 10), 3 February (n = 12), 19 March (n = 12), 30 April (n = 11) or 11 June (n = 11). Following this procedure, the does were completely isolated from bucks. Another 10 goats (YEAR group) were used to monitor natural annual ovarian activity; these females were completely isolated from males over the entire experimental period (from 18 December of one year until 17 December of the next year). Half the does of each group had a low body condition score (BC; ≤2.50; 2.46 ± 0.02), and half had a high BC (≥3.00; 3.24 ± 0.04). Ovulatory activity was monitored via the progesterone concentrations determined in blood samples collected twice per week for 4 months following melatonin implantation, and over 12 months for the YEAR group. Over 46% of the females showed ovarian activity after the melatonin treatment, ranging from the lowest response in December (30%) and the highest one in February (75%) without differences between the dates of melatonin insertion (P > 0.05). However, the response to the melatonin implant was higher in the females with a high BC than in females with a low BC (63% vs 31% for high and of low BC respectively, P < 0.05). The present results indicated that melatonin implants induce ovarian activity in does in the absence of male contact. The moment of melatonin implantation did not modify ovulatory activity. However, the ovulatory response to melatonin implants was higher in the females with a BC of ≥3.00.

Additional keywords: fat reserves, nutrition, progesterone, reproduction, seasonality.


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