1. Excess nuclear DNA in spermatozoa of guinea fowl
- Author
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Judit Barna and Graham J. Wishart
- Subjects
Male ,endocrine system ,Population ,Motility ,Biology ,Birds ,Polyploidy ,Andrology ,Food Animals ,Polyploid ,Domestic bird ,Animals ,Small Animals ,education ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Cell Nucleus ,education.field_of_study ,Guinea fowl ,Normal sperm ,urogenital system ,Equine ,DNA ,Anatomy ,Spermatozoa ,Sperm ,Nuclear DNA ,Sperm Tail ,Sperm Motility ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Acrosome - Abstract
The proportion of spermatozoa with elongated nuclei in ejaculates from a strain of guinea fowl was estimated, subjectively, to range from approximately 1 to 6%. It was confirmed by image analysis that in an ejaculate from one male, the distribution of nuclear lengths was bimodal, with a distinct population comprising 10% of spermatozoa having a mean nuclear length that was 52% greater than that of the remaining 90%. Furthermore, the mean DNA content of the 'large-nuclei' population was 1.85 times (not significantly different from twice) that of the main sperm population. The proportion of large-nuclei spermatozoa that was motile was less than that of normal sperm (31% versus 59%) and the velocity of motile spermatozoa was also less (24 microm/s versus 72 microm/s). The poor motility of the large-nuclei spermatozoa in vitro was reflected in their limited performance in vivo, since only 1.1% were found associated with the egg outer perivitelline layer. This is the first report to quantify the occurrence of, presumed, polyploid spermatozoa in a domestic bird. The incidence of such spermatozoa in commercial guinea fowl and other domestic poultry and the genesis and effects on fertility of such spermatozoa may be significant.
- Published
- 2003
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