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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 3, 252-261, Copyright © 1970 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Animal Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14850;
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, San Marcos University, Lima, Peru Corpus luteum function was studied in pregnant and nonpregnant alpacas. In the
first of two experiments, nonpregnant females in which ovulation was induced by sterile
mating or single intramuscular injections of 750 IU of HCG and unmated controls were
laparotomized at 9-day intervals beginning on day 3, 6, or 9 after treatment or heat
detection (day 0=day of treatment). In a second trial, 33 pregnant and 31 nonpregnant
females were killed 3, 8, 13, 18, or 23 days after mating or HCG injection, respectively.
The results showed that the corpus luteum of the alpaca undergoes rapid development
after ovulation, reaches its maximum size and secretory activity at days 8 to 9, and, in
the absence of pregnancy, declines sharply in both size and secretory activity by day 12.
The animals then return to estrus. Regression of corpora lutea was complete in most
cases by day 18. In pregnant animals, the size and activity attained by day 8 remained
almost unchanged, except for a transient decline in weight and progesterone concentration
on day 13. Control, unmated females had large follicles throughout the experimental
period. Average progesterone concentrations in luteal tissue of pregnant females on days
3, 8, 13, 18, and 23 were: 7.2, 20.0, 11.1, 22.7, and 22.6 µg/g, respectively; corresponding
values in nonpregnant females were: 5.4, 23.4, 0.6, 0.3 and 0.4 µg/g. Progesterone levels
in peripheral blood on the same days were 67, 222, 143, 287, and 268 ng/100 ml in pregnant females and 54, 441, 9, 23, and 11 ng/100 ml in nonpregnant females. The high blood
levels observed in nonpregnant animals on day 8 may represent an HCG effect. 20
hydroxypregn-4-en-3-one levels in blood tended to be higher in pregnant than in nonpregnant females on day 8. Highly significant (p < .01) correlation coefficients were
found between progesterone levels in blood and concentration and total content in luteal
tissue (r = 0.83 and 0.84, respectively). Mean progesterone concentration in adrenals
ranged from 1.0 to 6.3 µg/g; no differences existed between pregnant and nonpregnant
females and the correlation coefficient with peripheral blood progesterone was -0.05.
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