REDR2006 Reproduction in Domestic Ruminants VI Male Reproduction (2 abstracts)
1Division of Comparative Reproduction, Obstetrics and Udder Health, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Ullsväg 14C, Clinical Centre Box 7054, Uppsala 75007, Sweden; 2Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, 52 Campus Drive, Saskatoon SK S7N 5B4, Canada
The potential fertility of a sire can not be evaluated in the field simply by assessment of mating ability and physical examination, although these procedures can expose his limitations as a breeder. Finding a laboratory test that accurately estimates the potential fertility of a semen sample or a sire is also distant, as shown by the modest correlations that present tests have with fertility. Due to the complex nature of male fertility any sought for laboratory method must include testing of most sperm attributes relevant for both fertilisation and embryo development, not only in individual spermatozoa, but within a large, heterogeneous sperm population. Although such a task has proven difficult, it is both challenging and attractive for ruminants, where methods with good estimative power are available to evaluate the many attributes required for fertilisation. Among these methods are the isolation of highly viable spermatozoa by swim-up followed by their ability to respond to capacitation or acrosome reaction challenges and their capacity to penetrate homologous or heterologous zona pellucidae (ZP). Identification of fertility markers in, for instance, seminal plasma would further aid in identifying low-fertility sires. Future efforts should concentrate on finding how many spermatozoa in the semen sample are competent for fertilisation, perhaps by screening sperm linear motion, membrane integrity and membrane stability by multi-parametric methods, linked to the ability of males to provide a stable population of spermatozoa in a repeatable manner.
© 2007 Society for Reproduction and Fertility