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      Paced copulation in rats: effects of intromission frequency and duration on luteal activation and estrus length.

      1 , ,
      Physiology & behavior

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          Abstract

          When estrous female rats regulate or pace (P) the timing of vaginal intromissions received from males during mating, the stimulation is more effective in inducing luteal function and abbreviating the period of receptivity than is nonpaced (NP) stimulation. The present studies examined whether the coital stimuli necessary for each of these functional consequences are similar. In Experiment 1, estrous females received either 5 or 10 intromissions from males in P or NP tests; control animals received mounts-without-intromission (MO). The duration of estrus was not affected by 5P, 5NP, or 10NP stimulation, but was significantly abbreviated in 10P animals. In contrast, activation of prolonged luteal function occurred in 70% of 5P females compared to only 10% of 5NP females; luteal activation was similar in 10P and 10NP females (74% for both groups combined). In Experiment 2, male copulatory behaviors were compared in tests with P and NP females. Males tested with P females exhibited significantly longer intromission durations (616 +/- 21 msec) than did males tested with NP females (527 +/- 30 msec). Other measures of male copulatory performance such as the number of intromissions to ejaculation and the ejaculation latency did not differ between groups. These studies demonstrate that luteal activation is more readily induced by paced coital stimulation than is abbreviation of estrus. In addition, they suggest that differences between P and NP females in the behavioral and neuroendocrine responses to coital stimulation may result from differences in intromission duration displayed by males under these test conditions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Physiol. Behav.
          Physiology & behavior
          0031-9384
          0031-9384
          Jan 1989
          : 45
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biology, Boston University, MA 02215.
          Article
          2727140
          e2dd84f9-5bdb-49a9-8551-48f48ba2c250
          History

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