Behavioral indicators to detect ovarian phase in the dromedary she-camel

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

11 Scopus Citations
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Author(s)

  • S. A. Rateb
  • N. B. Ibrahim
  • D. Monaco
  • G. M. Lacalandra
  • K. A. El-Bahrawy

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1644-1651
Journal / PublicationTheriogenology
Volume85
Issue number9
Online published5 Feb 2016
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2016
Externally publishedYes

Abstract

This pilot study was conducted to test the hypothesis that female camels behave differently in various ovarian phases in the presence of a restrained male camel. The aim was to identify behavioral patterns which could be used as indicators to detect ovulatory phase by visual observation in the presence of a restrained virile bull. Twenty-four healthy, nonpregnant, and nonlactating adult females were used. Transrectal ultrasonography was performed for each animal once a week over a 3-week period to determine the phase of the ovarian cycle. Females were considered to be in the ovulatory phase (O) when there was at least one preovulatory follicle (12<Ø<19 mm) protruding from the ovarian surface, and in the nonovulatory phase (NO), when growing follicles, regressing follicles, or corpora lutea were detected. Immediately after examination, each female was freely exposed to a restrained bull for 15 minutes, and her behaviors were filmed. The videos were analyzed through a focal animal-sampling ethogram (states: looking at the male, looking outside; standing close to the male, searching; and lying down; events: interaction with the male, urination; defecation; sound emission; and steps). A score for tail position (tail score: 1 = close to the vulva, 2 = horizontal, 3 = vertical) and for interest in the bull (male time score: from 1 to 5; 1 = <20% of observation period spent near the bull, 5 = more than 80%) were recorded. Ovulatory phase camels showed higher interest in the male than nonovulatory phases: they stood close to the male for longer periods (P = 0.0159), interacted with the male more frequently (P = 0.0004), and tended to lie down in front of him (P = 0.1202). Moreover, ovulatory phase had a significant effect on male time score (P < 0.01), mature follicular ovarian phase being associated with higher scores. Seeking the male has already been proposed as a behavioral indicator of estrus in camels, this has now been confirmed using a standardized ethogram. The present results clarify that camels behave differently in different ovarian phases and that monitoring their behavior in the presence of a restrained bull could help detect their ovulatory phase. This would have profound implications for enhancing fertility in dromedary camels by improving timing of mating or artificial insemination.

Research Area(s)

  • Behavior, Camel, Estrus detection, Ovarian phase, Reproduction

Citation Format(s)

Behavioral indicators to detect ovarian phase in the dromedary she-camel. / Padalino, B.; Rateb, S. A.; Ibrahim, N. B. et al.
In: Theriogenology, Vol. 85, No. 9, 06.2016, p. 1644-1651.

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review