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      Unique seminal quality in the South African cheetah and a comparative evaluation in the domestic cat.

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          Abstract

          Analysis of 40 semen samples collected by electroejaculation from 18 cheetahs revealed no major differences in seminal traits among Transvaal, South West (Namibia) or hybrid (Transvaal X South West) males. However, mean spermatozoal concentration (14.5 X 10(6) spermatozoa/ml of ejaculate) and percent motility (54.0%) were less in cheetahs than in domestic cats (147.0 X 10(6) spermatozoa/ml of ejaculate, 77.0% motility) subjected to the same electroejaculation regimen. On the average, cheetah ejaculates contained 71.0% morphologically abnormal spermatozoa compared to 29.1% aberrant spermatozoal forms in the domestic cat. These results indicate that seminal characteristics in the cheetah are markedly inferior compared to the domestic cat, particularly with respect to the incidence of pleiomorphic spermatozoa. Because a recent parallel study demonstrates that the cheetah lacks genetic variation, it appears likely that spermatozoal abnormalities are a genetic consequence of genomic homozygosity characteristic of this endangered species.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biol. Reprod.
          Biology of reproduction
          0006-3363
          0006-3363
          Nov 1983
          : 29
          : 4
          Article
          10.1095/biolreprod29.4.1019
          6640033
          26d1456b-ed22-4367-b7aa-7df6598c10f6
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