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      Reproductive parameters of wild boar (Sus scrofa) in three different parts of Germany

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          Aging European Wild Hogs by Dentition

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            Classical swine fever (hog cholera) in wild boar in Europe.

            Classical swine fever (CSF) is of increasing concern in Europe where wild boar appear to play an important epidemiological role. In most parts of the continent, demographic trends are on the increase, due to improvement in game management. As a result of higher densities, populations become more susceptible to various infectious diseases, among which CSF is cause for particular concern. Wild boar do not appear to be a classic reservoir in most cases, but nevertheless may perpetuate foci of infection over the long term, constituting a real threat for the pig farming industry. Since the infection does not appear to spread easily in natural populations of free-ranging wild boars, control of the disease may be feasible. However, most of the appropriate measures, such as banning hunting, are not considered acceptable. Consequently, the expertise of wildlife disease specialists is required to help solve the problem when it occurs.
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              Effect of follicular size on meiotic and developmental competence of porcine oocytes.

              In several species, the developmental competence of the oocyte is acquired progressively during late follicular growth, after the acquisition of the competence to resume and complete meiosis. In the pig, full meiotic competence of the oocyte is reached in ovarian follicles with a diameter of 3 mm or more. However, there is no information about developmental competence acquisition. We analyzed the ability of oocytes from three foll icular size classes to resume and complete meiosis, to be fertilized, and to develop in vitro to the blastocyst stage. A total of 941 follicles were dissected from slaughterhouse gilt ovaries and classified as small ( 5 mm, n = 238). The cumulus-oocyte complexes recovered from these follicles were submitted to in vitro maturation for 44 h in TCM199 supplemented with 10 ng/ml EGF, 400 ng/ml pFSH and 570 microM cysteamine; in vitro fertilized for 18 h in mTBM with 10(5) frozen-thawed percoll-selected sperms/ml; and developed for 7 days in mSOF. Samples of oocytes or presumptive zygotes were fixed and stained at the end of maturation and fertilization. Groups of oocytes were cultured for 3 h in the presence of 35S-methionine before or after maturation for SDS-PAGE analysis of protein neosynthesis. More oocytes originating from medium and large follicles were competent for maturation than oocytes from small follicles (77 and 86% of metaphase II, respectively, versus 44%, P < 0.05). More oocytes from medium and large follicles werepenetratedby spermatozoa during in vitro fertilization, resulting in significantly more oocytes presenting two or more pronuclei at the end of fertilization (73 and 77% for medium and large follicles, respectively, versus 53% for small follicles, P < 0.05). More oocytes from medium and large follicles developed to the blastocyst stage (14 and 23%, respectively) than those from small follicles (3%, P < 0.05), even if the development rates were corrected by the maturation or fertilization rates. It is concluded that a high proportion of oocytes harvested from follicles of less than 3 mm in the pig are not fully competent for meiosis and are cytoplasmically deficient for development.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                European Journal of Wildlife Research
                Eur J Wildl Res
                Springer Nature
                1612-4642
                1439-0574
                October 22 2007
                May 4 2007
                : 53
                : 4
                : 287-297
                Article
                10.1007/s10344-007-0097-z
                89dd5fc1-cfc4-4f28-b84d-58f6f5fbfdbb
                © 2007
                History

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