Abstract:
We compared outcomes of two protocols
used to resynchronize estrus and ovulation in
dairy females after found open at pregnancy
checks. Replacement heifers and lactating cows
in which AI occurred 41 ± 1 day earlier were
presented every 2 to 3 weeks for a pregnancy
check by ultrasonography. Ovaries were
scanned, follicles were mapped and sized,
presence of corpus luteum was noted, and
GnRH was injected (day 0) . Females received
PGF2" 7 days later (day 7) and then were assigned
randomly to either receive estradiol
cypionate (ECP) 24 hours after PGF2" (day 8;
Heatsynch; n = 230) or a second GnRH injection
after PGF2" (day 9; Ovsynch; n = 224).
Those detected in estrus were inseminated,
whereas the rest received a timed AI (TAI)
between 65 and 74 hours after PGF2". Few
females (5.1%) were inseminated between open
diagnosis and day 8. On day 10, more ECPthan
GnRH-treated females were inseminated
after detected estrus (24 vs. 6%). Overall, more
Ovsynch than Heatsynch females received a
TAI (82 vs. 62%). Conception rates tended to
be greater for females inseminated after estrus
(37%) than after TAI (29%), and the tendency
was more pronounced for those treated with
Heatsynch (41 vs. 27%) than for those treated
with Ovsynch (33 vs. 31%). Conception rates
for females having elevated progesterone 7 days
after the not-pregnant diagnosis were greater
than conception rates of those having low
progesterone in Heatsynch (42%; n = 133 vs.
25%; n = 55) and Ovsynch protocols (33%; n =
142 vs. 15%; n = 45). Conception rates were
greater in heifers than in lactating cows (43 vs.
28%), regardless of protocol employed. Although
overall pregnancy outcomes were similar
in response to either the Ovsynch or Heatsynch
protocol, inseminations performed after
detected estrus before the scheduled TAI reduced
days to eventual conception and tended to
increase conception rates, particularly after
Heatsynch.