Author:
Martin Graeme B.,Tjondronegoro Soedjiharti,Boukhliq Rachid,Blackberry Margaret A.,Briegel Jan R.,Blache Dominique,Fisher James A.,Adams Norman R.
Abstract
In mediterranean environments, pastures are
very poor during the autumn and consequently small ruminants, such as sheep,
would have been losing body mass for many months so, during mating, gamete
production would be depressed in both sexes. Effectively, the nutritive
requirements for a photo-period-driven, annual reproductive cycle are out of
phase with seasonal changes in food availability. The problem could be
overcome through more flexible timing of reproduction, perhaps explaining
variations in seasonality between breeds that originate from differing
latitudes. To study these concepts and the mechanisms involved, the endogenous
rhythms and responses to photoperiod were compared in rams of
‘mediterranean origin’ (Merino) and ‘temperate origin’
(Suffolk). Groups of 16 rams of each breed were given a constant food supply
and subjected to 16 months of constant equinoctial photoperiod (12L : 12D) or
simulated ‘mediterranean’ changes in daylength (from 14L : 10D to
14D : 10L). With nutritional and photoperiodic inputs held constant, Merino
and Suffolk rams showed similar endogenous rhythms in reproductive activity.
Under constant nutritional inputs and a mediterranean photoperiodic cycle, the
endogenous rhythms were modified differently in the two breeds, with the
Merinos starting and finishing their seasons about 2 months earlier than the
Suffolks. These observations partially explain the patterns observed in rams
kept under field conditions. It is now necessary to test whether the rhythms
of reproduction in these breeds are also modified by changes in nutrition and
social cues.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
35 articles.
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