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1. Physical separation and reduction of contact duration with sexually hyperactive bucks decrease testosterone concentrations and sexual behaviour in bucks in sexual rest.

2. Sexually active male goats stimulate the endocrine and sexual activities of other males in seasonal sexual rest through the "buck-to-buck effect".

3. Nutritional supplementation improves the sexual response of bucks exposed to long days in semi-extensive management and their ability to stimulate reproduction in goats.

4. Undernutrition reduces the body weight and testicular size of bucks exposed to long days but not their ability to stimulate reproduction of seasonally anestrous goats.

5. Male effect using photostimulated bucks and nutritional supplementation advance puberty in goats under semi-extensive management.

6. Presence of a sexually active goat buck enhances ovulation occurrence in seasonally anestrous does after ovulation and luteolysis induction in hormonally-treated goats in seasonal anestrus.

7. Continuous presence of females in estrus does not prevent seasonal inhibition of LH and androgen concentrations in bucks.

8. The reproductive response to the male effect of 7- or 10-month-old female goats is improved when photostimulated males are used.

9. Highly precocious activation of reproductive function in autumn-born goats (Capra hircus) by exposure to sexually active bucks.

10. Progesterone doses of 5, 3 or 1 mg do not prevent short ovulatory cycles in goats exposed to photo-stimulated bucks.

11. Photoperiod-treated bucks are equal to melatonin-treated bucks for inducing reproductive behaviour and physiological functions via the "male effect" in Mediterranean goats.

12. Extensive management conditions do not modify the frequency of short ovulatory cycles in progesterone-treated does exposed to sexually active males.

13. Sexually active bucks are a critical social cue that activates the gonadotrope axis and early puberty onset in does.

14. Sexually active bucks counterbalance the seasonal negative feedback of estradiol on LH in ovariectomized goats.

15. Fifteen minutes of daily contact with sexually active male induces ovulation but delays its timing in seasonally anestrous goats.

16. Sexually active bucks are efficient to stimulate female ovulatory activity during the anestrous season also under temperate latitudes.

17. One day of contact with photostimulated bucks is sufficient to induce ovulation in seasonally anestrous goats.

18. Sexually active males prevent the display of seasonal anestrus in female goats.

19. Importance of intense male sexual behavior for inducing the preovulatory LH surge and ovulation in seasonally anovulatory female goats.

20. Two or 24 h of daily contact with sexually active males results in different profiles of LH secretion that both lead to ovulation in anestrous goats.

21. Reducing exposure to long days from 75 to 30 days of extra-light treatment does not decrease the capacity of male goats to stimulate ovulatory activity in seasonally anovulatory females.

22. Switching photo-stimulated males between groups of goats does not improve the reproductive response during the male effect.

23. Neuroendocrine and genetic control of seasonal reproduction in sheep and goats.

24. High fertility using artificial insemination during deep anoestrus after induction and synchronisation of ovulatory activity by the "male effect" in lactating goats subjected to treatment with artificial long days and progestagens.

25. Highly synchronous and fertile reproductive activity induced by the male effect during deep anoestrus in lactating goats subjected to treatment with artificially long days followed by a natural photoperiod.

26. Male-induced short oestrous and ovarian cycles in sheep and goats: a working hypothesis.

27. Seasonal ovulatory activity exists in tropical Creole female goats and Black Belly ewes subjected to a temperate photoperiod.

28. Evidence that the photoperiod controls the annual changes in testosterone secretion, testicular and body weight in subtropical male goats.

29. Seasonal ovulatory activity and plasma prolactin concentrations in the Spanish ibex (Capra pyrenaica hispanica) maintained in captivity.

30. Induction of sexual activity in lactating anovulatory female goats using male goats treated only with artificially long days.

31. Induction of sexual activity of male creole goats in subtropical northern Mexico using long days and melatonin.

32. Male reproductive condition is the limiting factor of efficiency in the male effect during seasonal anestrus in female goats.

33. Evidence for an annual reproductive rhythm independent of food availability in male Creole goats in subtropical northern Mexico.

34. Implications of recent advances in reproductive physiology for reproductive management of goats.

35. Length of postpartum anestrus in goats in subtropical Mexico: effect of season of parturition and duration of nursing.

36. [Effect of progesterone on ovulation length and duration of the ovarian cycle induced by the male effect in the Barbarine ewe and the local Tunisian goat].

37. Effect of short photoperiodic cycles on male genital tract and testicular parameters in male goats (Capra hircus).

38. [Can melatonin be used in out-of-season reproduction in domestic mammals?].

39. Maintenance of sperm production in bucks during a third year of short photoperiodic cycles.

40. Abolition of the seasonal release of luteinizing hormone and testosterone in Alpine male goats (Capra hircus) by short photoperiodic cycles.

41. [Hourly variations in rectal temperature and prolactinemia in the creole goat kept outside in a tropical environment].

42. Ultrastructure of in vivo fertilization in the goat.

43. [Progesterone secretion during male-induced cycle in the Creole goat in anestrus: seasonal effects].

44. Photoperiodic and melatonin treatments for the control of seasonal reproduction in sheep and goats.

45. Seasonal and hormonal control of pulsatile LH secretion in the dairy goat (Capra hircus).

46. Effect on oestrus and ovulation of exposing creole goats to the male at three times of the year.

47. Sexually active male goats stimulate the endocrine and sexual activities of other males in seasonal sexual rest through the 'buck-to-buck effect'

48. Neuroendocrine and genetic control of seasonal reproduction in sheep and goats

49. Induction of sexual activity in lactating anovulatory female goats using male goats treated only with artificially long days

50. Male reproductive condition is the limiting factor of efficiency in the male effect during seasonal anestrus in female goats

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