2014
DOI: 10.3906/vet-1404-81
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New understanding of an old phenomenon: uncontrolled factors and misconceptions that cast a shadow over studies of the ‘male effect’ on reproduction in small ruminants

Abstract: In female sheep and goats, exposure to males can be used to induce ovulation and thus control and synchronise fertility. This 'male effect' offers simple, cost-effective, and hormone-free management of reproduction in flocks and herds but, despite decades of research, significant gaps in our knowledge impede commercial application. Many of these gaps can be traced back to misconceptions in the early documentation of the male effect, and others are the result of uncontrolled factors in experimental design. Cons… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Several factors that influence ram effect outcome, such as preconditioning period, potency of ram stimulus, experiment endpoint (De St Jorre, Hawken, & Martin, ). Under this same reasoning, ram effect displays important variation between wool and hair breeds (Cox et al., ; Monreal et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several factors that influence ram effect outcome, such as preconditioning period, potency of ram stimulus, experiment endpoint (De St Jorre, Hawken, & Martin, ). Under this same reasoning, ram effect displays important variation between wool and hair breeds (Cox et al., ; Monreal et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In sheep and goats of many genotypes, the sudden introduction of novel males can induce ovulation in females that are reproductively quiescent because they are pre-pubertal, out of season, or lactating (reviews: Ungerfeld, 2007;Delgadillo, 2011;Jorre de St Jorre et al, 2014). This "male effect" offers control at two levels: i) the timing of births is no longer determined by the natural breeding season of the females; and ii) the induced ovulations are synchronized among the females in the flock or herd.…”
Section: The 'Male Effect'mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The response to pheromones may be affected by memory of individual odours (Wyatt 2014)pp218-221. For example, in female sheep and goats, the primer 'male effect' from the male's pheromone seems to be more effective if the male is novel, likely detected by his individual odour (Jorre De St Jorre et al 2014).…”
Section: Mammal Pheromonesmentioning
confidence: 99%