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Heat Stress: A Serious Disruptor of the Reproductive Physiology of Dairy Cows

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani13111846

Keywords

heat stress; endocrine response; gene expression; fertility; dairy cow

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Global warming poses a significant threat to the dairy sector, affecting both tropical and temperate regions. High temperatures compromise the welfare and fertility of dairy cows, leading to economic losses for farmers. Dairy cows employ various adaptive mechanisms to cope with heat stress, but the disruption of hormone secretion has long-lasting effects on fertility. Mitigation measures can restore milk production, but summer fertility records remain low due to the multifaceted nature of sustaining high fertility and proper reproductive processes.
Global warming is a significant threat to the sustainability and profitability of the dairy sector, not only in tropical or subtropical regions but also in temperate zones where extreme summer temperatures have become a new and challenging reality. Prolonged exposure of dairy cows to high temperatures compromises animal welfare, increases morbidity, and suppresses fertility, resulting in devastating economic losses for farmers. To counteract the deleterious effects of heat stress, cattl e employ various adaptive thermoregulatory mechanisms including molecular, endocrine, physiological, and behavioral responses. These adaptations involve the immediate secretion of heat shock proteins and cortisol, followed by a complex network of disrupted secretion of metabolic and reproductive hormones such as prolactin, ghrelin, ovarian steroid, and pituitary gonadotrophins. While the strategic heat stress mitigation measures can restore milk production through modifications of the microclimate and nutritional interventions, the summer fertility records remain at low levels compared to those of the thermoneutral periods of the year. This is because sustainment of high fertility is a multifaceted process that requires appropriate energy balance, undisrupted mode of various hormones secretion to sustain the maturation and fertilizing competence of the oocyte, the normal development of the early embryo and unhampered maternal-embryo crosstalk. In this review, we summarize the major molecular and endocrine responses to elevated temperatures in dairy cows, as well as the impacts on maturing oocytes and early embryos, and discuss the consequences that heat stress brings about in dairy cattle fertility.

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