Author:
Fogarty N. M.,Maxwell W. M. C.,Eppleston J.,Evans G.
Abstract
The survival to term of 414 sheep embryos, thawed and transferred after
conventional cryopreservation and storage for 13 years, was evaluated. A
concurrent experiment involving the transfer of vitrified embryos to 91 ewes
and artificial insemination of 51 ewes with frozen–thawed semen from
sires of the long-term cryopreserved embryos provided forms of control
treatments. The donor ewes had a mean ovulation rate of 10.9, and 7.1 embryos
per ewe were cryopreserved. Each recipient ewe received two embryos and
pregnancy was assessed at Day 18, Day 54 and term. The pregnancy rate was
lower in the long-term embryo group than the artificial insemination group at
Day 18 (P<0.01) and Day 54
(P<0.05), although the difference at term (31%
v. 49%) was not significant, with the vitrified
embryo group being similar to the long-term group. Embryo survival to birth
was 21%, with the majority of loss (80%) occurring by Day 18.
The later stage of development and higher grade of transferred embryos and the
older age of donor ewes resulted in a significantly higher
(P<0.01) pregnancy rate at Day 54 and term, and
percentage of lambs born and weaned. Other effects of donor ewes (genotype,
superovulation treatment, number of ovulations and embryos cryopreserved) were
not significant. Implications for the design of genetic evaluation and
germplasm conservation programmes using embryo cryopreservation technology are
discussed.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
34 articles.
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