artificial insemination

Post on 15-Aug-2015

31 Views

Category:

Science

4 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Artificial Insemination

AI

Presented By:

ANDRELORD GERON MEDINA

Department of AgricultureRegional Field Office 1

Regulatory Division

What Is AI?

• General definition-the introduction of semen into the oviduct or uterus by some means other than sexual intercourse.

• Ag definition- the use of semen from a genetically superior male to inseminate a female resulting in a genetically superior offspring.

Where Is AI Used?

• Cattle

• Horses

• Swine

• Sheep

• Goats

• Dogs

• Humans

• Turkey

• Chickens

• Rabbits

• Fish

• Fox

• Mink

• Bees

Why Use AI?

• AI provides the producer an opportunity to use sires possessing superior genetics. Depending upon the needs and goals of an individual's breeding program, AI offers an economically feasible means of increasing productivity over a wide range of traits.

• In spite of this enormous potential to improve production levels, many producers have not put themselves in a position to take advantage of the benefits offered by AI.

Advantages

• Best possible sires of proven quality

• Disease control

• Cost effectiveness

• Flexibility

• Safety

• No bull, stallion, ram, boar, etc.

Overview of Artificial Insemination (What Has To Be Considered First)

Fertility Testing

• Important step in evaluating males to be kept for breeding.

• Indispensable in the area of artificial insemination since a bull may be worth thousands of dollars & still produce progeny long after his death (because the semen is stored).

• The process of evaluating the bull's ability to reproduce.

Factors to consider in Testing

• Libido (sex drive) - This is especially important in bulls kept for natural breeding since some bulls are more active breeders than others.

• Scrotal circumference - This is an observable, measurable characteristic that indicates fertility.

• In general, the greater the scrotal circumference, the greater the sperm production, hence increased fertility.

• Semen evaluation - This is the most important factor in fertility testing. Semen is evaluated for:

Semen Evaluated For Appearance

• A uniform solid, dense appearance indicates a high sperm concentration.

• A sample which appears to be translucent contains fewer sperm cells.

• Semen with a curd appearance should not be used as this indicates inflammation.

Semen Evaluated For Volume

• May vary depending on the age of the bull or sire.

• Younger sires produce a smaller volume of semen which is not a negative factor as long as the concentration of semen is good.

Motility

• It must be evaluated under a microscope at 400X.

• Most semen should contain 70 percent or more motile cells

Concentration

• Determined by the number of sperm per milliliter of semen.

• This is probably the most important indicator of fertility, except with sires, in which scrotal circumference is the determinant.

Morphology

• The proportion of abnormal sperm should not exceed 20 percent.

• Most males do, however, produce some abnormal sperm.

Semen Collection Methods: Artificial Vagina in goats and cattles

• Consists of an outer tube or casing which is constructed of heavy rubber or plastic, and an inner tube or lining of thin rubber.

• The space between the two tubes is filled with warm water, which maintains the collected sperm at a constant temperature, neither too hot or too cold.

Semen Collection Methods: Artificial Vagina

• One end of the apparatus is open to allow the entrance of the penis and the other end is attached to a glass tube or beaker to receive the ejaculated semen.

• This is the most commonly used device for collecting semen.

Semen Collection Methods: Electric Stimulation

• An electro-ejaculator apparatuses introduces a weak alternating current to the sacral and pelvic nerves via electrodes placed in the rectum until erection and ejaculation occur.

Semen Collection Methods: Electric Stimulation

• It is used on all farm animals except boars and horses.

• It is used effectively on bulls that cannot mount due to leg injuries.

Semen Preparation: Storage & Shipment

• It may be kept at room temperature if it is to be used within two hours of collection.

• If the semen will be put into long-term storage, semen needs to be gradually cooled and frozen a temperature below zero.

Semen Preparation: Semen Extenders

• Why Added?

• Add extra needed Volume

• Exert beneficial effect on the sperm

Semen Preparation: Semen Extenders

• 1. Egg yolk – phosphate: used in bull, ram, and stallion semen

• 2. Egg yolk – citrate: used in bull and ram semen

• 3. Homogenized whole milk: used in bull, ram, and boar semen

Semen Preparation: Semen Extenders cont.

• 4. Glycine-containing diluents: used mostly in boar semen.

• Some extenders contain antibiotics to control bacteria and contamination.

History

• It may have been used as far back as 1322, at which time an Arab chieftain used artificial methods to impregnate a prized mare.

• The first scientific research relative to A.I. in domestic animals was conducted with dogs by the Italian physiologist Lazarro Spallanzani.

Equipment Needed For A.I. CATTLE GOATS AND HORSES

• 1. Liquid nitrogen tank – Used to store semen straws at -320 degrees

Fahrenheit– Semen stored in tank, may last indefinitely

once froze properly & temperature is maintained

Equipment Needed For A.I. cont.

• 2. A semen straw – containing a single dose of semen

• 3. Straw tweezers– Used to pick up the semen when in the tank &

thawing unit

Equipment Needed cont.

• Inseminating syringe or gun – Made from stainless steel – Used to place semen in the reproductive tract

of the cow or heifer and to maneuver it through the cervix

• Sterile Lubricant (Lube)– Lubrication put on plastic sleeve in order

to first enter the vulva

Equipment Needed cont.

• Paper Towels– To dry off the semen straw– To wipe animal clean, especially the vulva– To put on top of the vulva to keep clean

• Scissors– To cut the end of the straw just prior to

insemination

Equipment Needed cont.

• Plastic Sleeve– To put on inseminator’s arm to keep clean

• Cover Sheath– Inseminator’s gun is put inside of the sheath

so that all is kept clean

Equipment Needed cont.

– KaMar heat strips: heating aid with red dye that expels when a cow or heifer is mounted

– Tail Chalk: chalk paint is

smeared when cow

or heifer is mounted

Disadvantages

• Equipment- availability

• Time– Careful herd observation required

• 3-4 observations per day– 15-20 minutes per observation

Steps to AI(Semen Collection)

• Artificial Vagina– Cattle, Horses, Swine, Sheep

• “Milking of Semen”– Poultry

• Abdominal Pressure– Fish

Steps to AI(Semen Storage)

• Collected, evaluated, cooled slowly, & frozen– -320°F

• Lasts several months• 30 years• 40 years

Steps to AI(Heat Detection)

• Increased activity

• Mounting

• Swelling and redness of vulva

• Discharge

• Winking– Mares

• Standing heat– Best indicator of estrus

Steps to AI(Insemination)

• Cattle– 12 hours after heat detection

• Horses– 3rd, 5th, & 7th day of estrus Horses

• Swine– 24 and 12 hours after onset of estrus in sows– 12 and 24 hours after onset of estrus in gilts

• Sheep– Two inseminations increase conception and

multiple lambs

Recto-vaginal Method(Cattle)

• Remove all feces from the rectum• Grasp the cervix through the wall of the

rectum– Not done with horses or swine

• Insert inseminating tube through vagina and into the cervix

• Guide tube through cervix• Deposit semen from middle of cervix to

body of uterus

Recto-vaginal Method

Lapriscopic Artificial Insemination

(Sheep)

• Semen injected from a syringe through a pipette into upper one-third of uterine horn through abdominal wall

Lapriscopic Artificial Insemination

Artificial Insemination procedures

• Step #1: Restrain the animal to be inseminated.

Step #2: 

• Raise the tail with the right hand and gently massage the rectum with the lubricated glove on the left hand.

• Step #3: Gently wipe the vulva with a paper towel to remove excess manure and debris.

Procedure for artificial insemination

Step #4: 

Insert the gun at a 30° upward

angle to avoid entering the urethral

opening

and bladder located on the floor of the

vagina.

Procedure for artificial insemination

Figure #1: Keeping the gloved hand even with the tip of the inseminator gun.

Figure #2: Allowing manure to pass over the top of the hand and arm.

Procedure for artificial insemination Figure #3: Dealing with colon constrictions.

Figure #4: Grasping the cervix and gently moving it forward

Procedure for artificial insemination

Figure #5: Close-up of the cervix.

Figure #6: Finding the opening of the cervix.

Procedure for artificial insemination

Figure #7: Moving the cervix over the tip of the insemination gun.

Figure #8: Locating the end of the insemination gun.

Procedure for artificial insemination Figure #9: Depositing the semen in the body of the uterus

Figure #10: Good distribution of the semen to both uterine horns.

Procedure for artificial insemination

Figure #11: Improper distribution of the semen into one horn because the insemination gun is pushed too far forward.

Updated:04/15/23

Advantages of AI

• Genetic Improvement– Wide spread use and availability of genetically

superior sires– 1 bull can breed 500,000 cows in a lifetime– After death, semen can be used

• Oldest frozen semen 40 - 45 years old

• Rapid proof of sire– Progeny testing examines offspring for desired

traits– With natural mating would only have 100’s of

offspring

Updated:04/15/23

Advantages of AI (cont.)

• Availability of sires– Sires anywhere in world

• Danger of bull (male) removed

• Disease reduction

• Crossbreeding– Can try without buying sire

• Improved management– Start to keep records

Updated:04/15/23

Advantages of AI (cont.)

• Economics– Cost of very good sire is reduced because

extend semen– Cost to maintain sire’s reduced as don’t need

as many to breed all the females

Updated:04/15/23

Disadvantages

• Estrus detection must be good• Trained inseminator• Bull semen the best, other species not as

good• Use of poor male may increase if not tested

well• Technology to store cooled or frozen semen

– Difficult to maintain

Updated:04/15/23

Age When Semen Can Be Collected

Bull 12 months

Boar 6 - 8 months

Ram 6 - 9 months

Stallion 20 - 24 months

Dog 8 - 12 months

Updated:04/15/23

Semen Collection

• Sexual arousal– Sight, sound, smell, touch– Best mount - Live

Updated:04/15/23

Collection on a Live MountCollection on a Live Mount

Updated:04/15/23

Collection on a Live MountCollection on a Live Mount

Updated:04/15/23

Boar Collection on a Dummy

Updated:04/15/23

Ram Collection on a Dummy

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen

• Extenders (7 components)– Nutrients

• Glucose, fructose

– Cold shock prevention• Milk, skim-milk, egg yolk

– Buffer• Citrate, Tris

– Osmotic pressure• The buffer component

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen (cont.)

– Inhibit bacterial growth• antibiotics

– Increase volume– Cryoprotectant

• glycerol

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen (cont.)

• Liquid Semen– Collect semen– Semen quality exam– Extend 1:3 (semen:extender)

• Minimal extension rate

– Cool to 5°C over 2 hours• OK for bull, stallion, ram• Boar - cool to 15°C

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen (cont.)

– Once cooled, extend semen to final amount• Bovine (inseminate 0.5 ml)

– 2 to 5 million sperm/ml

• Equine (inseminate 1 billion sperm)– 25 to 50 million sperm/ml– If don’t cool then inseminate 500 million motile sperm

• Swine (inseminate 1.5 to 6 billion sperm in 50 ml)– 30 to 120 million sperm/ml

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen (cont.)

• Frozen semen– Follow instruction for collecting and cooling

semen– After cooling to 5°C, extend to 2X the final

concentration desired• If want final concentration to be 40 million/ml then

dilute to 80 million to ml at this time

– Hold semen for 4 to 6 hours at 5°C• Equilibrates semen to the cold

Updated:04/15/23

Preservation of Semen (cont.)

– Add the cryoprotectant• Mix extender with 2X final cryoprotectant amount, 1:1 with

extended semen• Do this in small portions to minimize cryoprotectant toxicity

– Package semen• 0.5 ml French straws• Ampules

– Freeze semen• Liquid nitrogen vapor

– Static– Mechanically controlled

• Dry ice depressions for pellet freezing

Updated:04/15/23

Insemination of the Female

• Detection of estrus– No need to review this material

• Time of insemination– Cattle (2X daily heat detection)

• 12 hours after observed in standing heat (AM - PM rule)

• Inseminate on the day of estrus

– Swine (2X daily heat detection)• Sow - 24 and 36 hours after first seen in estrus• Gilt - 12 and 24 hours after first seen in estrus

Updated:04/15/23

Insemination of the Cow

Rectal-Vaginal Approach

Updated:04/15/23

Artificial Insemination in the Sow

Updated:04/15/23

Use and Success of AISemen

Species Liquid Frozen Preg. Rate Major Problems

Dairy Cattle OK OK 60-70 OK, need good heatdetection

Beef Cattle OK OK 55-65 Range area large:poor heat detection

Sheep OK Fair 50-65 Large range; low value of ewe

Swine OK Fair 40-75 Estrus detection

Horses OK Fair 30-60 Timing insemination,breed restrictions

Turkey OK Poor 90 None

Humans OK Fair 5-30 Donors; infertility; time

ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION

04/15/23

4

THE END

top related