4.4 Article

Profiling patterns of fecal 20-oxopregnane concentrations during ovarian cycles in free-ranging southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum)

期刊

ANIMAL REPRODUCTION SCIENCE
卷 161, 期 -, 页码 89-95

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.anireprosci.2015.08.009

关键词

White rhinoceros; Free-ranging; Progestagen metabolites; Non-invasive hormone monitoring; Ovarian cyclicity

资金

  1. University of Western Australia
  2. Mammal Research Institute and Endocrine Research Laboratory, University of Pretoria
  3. Institute for Breeding Rare and Endangered African Mammals
  4. AAZK's Bowling For Rhinos
  5. SAVE African Rhino Foundation

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Unlike their wild counterparts, many white rhinoceros females in captivity fail to reproduce successfully such that current captive populations are not self-sustaining. The causes of the problem are poorly understood. Variation in cycle length and long periods of acyclicity are characteristics of the majority of these non-reproducing females in captivity but it is unknown whether these characteristics are a feature of reproductively successful free-ranging females. This study therefore aimed to monitor cyclic activity in a wild population of southern white rhinoceros at Lapalala Wilderness, South Africa, by measuring the concentrations of immunoreactive fecal progestagen metabolites (fPM). Five adult females were tracked twice per week for 20 months and if located a fresh fecal sample was collected. Reproductive events and group structural dynamics were also recorded and subsequently correlated with the fPM data. The baseline concentration of fPM was 0.69 +/- 0.20 mu g/g DW while concentrations during pregnancy were 30-400-fold higher. The females exhibited estrous cycle lengths of 30.6 +/- 7.7 days and, based on fPM data, gestation length in one female was 502 +/- 3 days. Year-round monitoring showed no clear evidence of seasonality in ovarian activity. During cyclic luteal activity females were often seen in the presence of a dominant bull. One female stopped cycling after removal of the local dominant bull and luteal activity only returned after a new bull was introduced. This suggests that white rhinoceros females in the wild might need external stimuli from a male to ovulate. These findings indicate that the irregular cyclicity reported for white rhinoceros housed in zoos and animal parks may result from conditions in captivity and account for reduced fertility. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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