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Heat induced infertility of boars: The inter-relationship between depressed sperm output and fertility and an estimation of the critical air temperature above which sperm output is impaired
Authors:BA Stone
Institution:Animal Industry Division, Department of Agriculture, Box 1671, G.P.O., Adelaide, S.A. 5001 Australia
Abstract:Eight groups of Large-White gilts were each inseminated with different numbers of normal motile sperm, in the range 0.28–7.0 × 109. A significant (P < 0.05) relationship between conception rate and the number of motile sperm inseminated was shown. This relationship can be used to equate output of motile sperm with levels of fertility of boars. The optimal number of motile sperm for conception following intra-cervical insemination was near 5 × 109 and the threshold number, below which animals did not conceive, was c. 4 × 108.In a second experiment, three Large-White boars were subjected to graded thermal treatment (air temperature was increased by 1°C per day for 20 days, from a basal level of 20°C to a maximal level of 40°C) and responses of ejaculate and other physiological characteristics were monitored. Scrotal surface temperature, respiration rate and rectal temperature increased (P < 0.05) beyond basal levels at air temperatures of 30°C, 33°C and 35°C, respectively. Motility of sperm in ejaculates decreased when air temperature reached 30°C and this response was presumed to reflect hyperthermia in epididymal tissues, consistent with increasing scrotal surface temperature at this same air temperature. Motility fell below a pre-treatment level of about 93%, to 19% (P < 0.05), 3 weeks after heating. Volumes of seminal plasma and gel in ejaculates were also lower (P < 0.05) following heating. Changes in daily sperm production were minor and, as a result, daily motile sperm production levels paralleled changes in motility. Proportions of abnormal types of sperm increased (P < 0.05) to maximal levels in the last week of heating and all returned to pretreatment values 5 weeks later. High proportions of sperm with kinoplasmic droplets appeared in ejaculates collected after heating (P < 0.05), evidence that epididymal cell types in the boar are sensitive to heat.As a result of heat treatment, normal motile sperm production decreased from control levels (1.28 × 1010·day?1) to 0.15 × 1010·day?1, 3 weeks after heating ceased. However, the results suggest that normal sperm output by Large-White boars can be maintained at air temperatures as high as 29°C.By relating the results of both experiments, it is concluded that fertility of the boars in the second experiment (if mated once daily) would be depressed for about 5 weeks after heat treatment ceased. The findings support many field reports which indicate a contribution of boars to lower conception rates of sows during and immediately following summer and the results can be used in formulating strategies to circumvent this widespread problem.
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