Forty years of control of the oestrous cycle in ruminants: progress made, unresolved problems and the potential impact of sperm encapsulation technology
W Jochle
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
5(6) 587 - 594
Published: 1993
Abstract
Pharmacological control of the oestrous cycle may, with or without sperm encapsulation, remain an indispensable part of any attempt to make artificial insemination available to the ranch-cattle industry. Of the current methods, those most likely to remain acceptable with regulatory agencies and to gain acceptance with industry are those involving the short-term use (7-10 days) of minimal effective doses of progestins (preferably progesterone) and the subsequent use of an analogue of prostaglandin F2 alpha. The use of microencapsulated sperm with a long lifespan would allow artificial insemination to be achieved without reference to the time when heat and ovulation may occur.https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9930587
© CSIRO 1993