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Reproduction, Fertility and Development Reproduction, Fertility and Development Society
Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Embryo transfer in the dromedary camel (Camelus dromedarius) using asynchronous, meclofenamic acid-treated recipients

Julian A. Skidmore A B and M. Billah A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A The Camel Reproduction Centre, P.O. Box 11808, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

B Corresponding author. Email: luluskid@emirates.net.ae

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 17(4) 417-421 https://doi.org/10.1071/RD04081
Submitted: 30 July 2004  Accepted: 16 January 2005   Published: 15 March 2005

Abstract

A total of 40 (Day 7) embryos were recovered from the uteri of 10 superovulated camels. Recipient camels (n = 30) were prepared by injection with 20 μg of the gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogue buserelin (i.v.) to induce ovulation and then treatment with 1 g meclofenamic acid (a prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor), orally, once on Day 7 and twice daily on Days 8 and 9 after ovulation and thereafter at a dose of 1 g day−1 until 8 days after embryo transfer. Embryos were transferred into recipients on Day 8 (n = 10), Day 10 (n = 10) or Day 12 (n = 10) after ovulation and another 10 embryos were transferred into untreated recipients on Day 8 after ovulation as controls. In addition, serum samples from all recipient camels were recovered daily throughout the period of meclofenamic acid administration and for a further 7 days after treatment had ceased and were assayed for progesterone concentrations. Results showed that whereas only one of 10 of the control group of recipients (10%) was diagnosed pregnant, a total of eight of 10 Day 8 (80%), six of 10 Day 10 (60%) and seven of 10 Day 12 (70%) recipients were diagnosed pregnant by ultrasonography 12 days after the embryo had been transferred. Subsequently, however, four pregnancies were lost when the conceptus was aged between 22 and 60 days, but this is not considered above the early fetal mortality rate expected in camels after natural mating or after transferring camel embryos to untreated recipients. Serum progesterone concentrations remained elevated, above 2 ng mL−1, throughout the period of meclofenamic acid administration in all recipient camels; thereafter, concentrations remained above 2 ng mL−1 in pregnant animals, whereas in non-pregnant camels concentrations had declined to baseline values (<1 ng mL−1) within 3 days of the end of the treatment period. In conclusion, treatment of recipient camels with meclofenamic acid reduced the need for tightly timed synchrony between donor and recipient because pregnancies were established in recipients that had ovulated as much as 5 days ahead of the donor.


Acknowledgments

The authors thank Mr Ajaz Hussain for technical assistance with embryo recovery and the collection of blood samples and Dr James Wood, Animal Health Trust, Newmarket, Suffolk, UK, for his invaluable help with the statistics. This study was kindly sponsored by H. H. General Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai.


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