4.3 Article

Effects of cobalt/vitamin B-12 status in ewes on ovum development and lamb viability at birth

Journal

REPRODUCTION FERTILITY AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 553-562

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/RD07012

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Scottish Blackface ewes from cobalt-deficient farmland were fed a diet containing 0.06 mg cobalt per kg dry matter from approximately 30 days before embryo recovery/transfer until lambing. Ewes remained untreated (-Co; n=82) or were given an intraruminal cobalt-containing bolus to compensate for the dietary deficit (+Co; n=82). Ewes used as embryo donors (-Co, n=17; +Co, n=16) were artificially inseminated with semen from a single Suffolk sire. Day 6 embryos obtained from -Co and +Co donors were transferred in singleton to -Co and +Co recipients in a 2 x 2 factorial-designed experiment to determine the effects of cobalt/vitaminB(12) status during the periconception period ( factor 1) and pregnancy (factor 2) on lamb viability at birth. Mean (+/- s.e.m.) circulating concentrations of vitamin B-12 in -Co and +Co donors at ovum recovery were 182 +/- 10 and 1288 +/- 64 pmol L-1, respectively (P<0.001), and the number of corpora lutea per ewe ovulating was 9.9 +/- 1.6 and 14.4 +/- 1.3, respectively (P<0.05). Treatment did not affect the proportion of recovered ova that contained >32 cells (viable) or the median stage of development (late morula), but viable ova recovered from -Co v. +Co ewes had a better morphological grade (2.0 +/- 0.1 v. 2.20 +/- 0.04, respectively; P<0.01). There was no effect of treatment on the proportion of recipient ewes that became pregnant. Circulating concentrations of vitamin B-12 were lower in -Co than +Co ewes during pregnancy (P<0.001) and at birth in lambs born to -Co ewes compared with those born to +Co ewes (P<0.001). There was no effect of donor or recipient cobalt/vitamin B-12 status on lamb birthweight, neonatal vigour or neonatal rectal temperatures, but lambs derived from +Co v. -Co embryo donors were more active in the first 3 days after birth (P<0.05). Results show that sub-clinical cobalt/vitamin B-12 deficiency reduces ovulatory response in superovulated ewes and that periconception nutrition can affect neonatal lamb behaviour.

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