Estrus, gestation, and placentation were studied in the Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) and the gray short-tailed oppossum (Monodelphis domestica), representatives of the prototypic, New World marsupial family Didelphidae. Didelphis is a large (3,000 g), pouched opossum that exhibits a 28-day estrous cycle, spontaneous estrus and ovulation, and a high ovulation rate (60 ova per cycle). Monodelphis is a small (100 g), pouchless opossum with male-induced estrus and ovulation and a moderate ovulation rate (12 ova per cycle). Implantation occurs on day 10 of the 13-day gestation period in Didelphis and on day 12 of the 15-day gestation in Monodelphis. Gestation and placentation, including the ultrastructural features of trophoblastic apposition to the uterine mucosa, are very similar in Didelphis and Monodelphis. Differences, such as a larger increase in uterine volume and a more highly folded endometrium following implantation in Monodelphis are minor. They appear to be related to the smaller maternal body size and the relatively larger uterine load of embryos in Monodelphis. Because body size is one of the major variables among New World marsupials, the descriptions of gestation and placentation presented here for Didelphis and Monodelphis, provide a basis for comparison in future studies of didelphid marsupials.
Testosterone concentrations in serum samples collected weekly over a 5-year period from a young adult male Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) and a young adult male African forest elephant (Loxodonta africana cyclotis) were measured by radioimmunoassay . Testosterone profiles during this maturational period were compared between the two species and related to the occurrence of musth, a recurring physiological and behavioral condition exhibited by most mature Asian, and some African, bull elephants. Musth is characterized by secretion from the bull's temporal glands, dribbling urine, and increased aggression. Serum testosterone concentrations in the Asian bull were elevated substantially between April and September each year, coincident with the presence of temporal gland secretion, urine dribbling, and aggressive behavior. Testosterone levels from April through September averaged (? SEM) 41.2 '-t 2.8 ng/ml, compared to 7.6 ? 1 .O ng/ml during the rest of the year. In contrast, the testosterone profile of the African bull showed greater variation and lower levels overall, the only pattern being a tendency for levels to be lowest from November to February (avg. 6.8 2 1.5 vs. 10.3 2 0.8 ngiml during the rest of the year). Temporal gland secretion and other signs of musth were first observed in this bull in 1988, at age 17. While his testosterone profile did not show a pattern comparable to that in the Asian bull, average testosterone values were significantly greater in 1988 compared to previous years.The Asian bull showed sexual attention to preovulatory (estrous) cows whether in musth or not, and exposure to estrous cows did not appear to alter the highly consistent, annual pattern of musth as evidenced in temporal gland flow.
Summary. Concentrations of oestradiol-17\g=b\,progesterone, and luteinizing hormone (LH) were measured in plasma collected at 6-to 12-h intervals from tammars around the time of parturition and post-partum oestrus. Parturition occurred on Day 26 or 27 after reactivation of lactation-delayed pregnancy and coincided with a precipitous decline in progesterone levels. A sharp rise in oestradiol, from basal concentrations of < 10 pg/ml to a peak of 13 to 32 pg/ml, as well as oestrus, followed the drop in progesterone by 8\m=.\3and 9\m=.\8 h, respectively. The LH surge was dependent on the oestradiol rise and followed it by 7 h. Ovulation followed mating by about 30 h and the LH surge by 24 h. Removal of the ovary with the large Graafian follicle prevented the oestradiol rise, oestrus and the LH surge, but not parturition. Peripartum changes in peripheral oestradiol do not appear to be involved in initiation of parturition but the oestradiol rise and associated change in the oestradiol:progesterone ratio are important signals for post-partum oestrus and the LH surge.
The development of physiological responsiveness to male stimuli in peripubertal female gray short-tailed opossums was examined in this study. Prepubertal females were exposed directly or indirectly to male chemicals (odors) or to no male stimuli. All females exposed directly to deposited male stimuli (22/22) showed estrus at a mean (+/- SEM) age of 127 +/- 2 days. Only 59% (13/22) of females exposed indirectly showed estrus, and at an older mean age of 162 +/- 5 days (p less than 0.01). Vaginal estrus was not observed in any of the females isolated from male stimuli (0/11). Direct exposure of prepubertal females to male odors was associated with higher uterine weights compared to those of indirectly exposed and isolated females. Reproductive success, measured as litter production, of peripubertal females greater than 140 days old was comparable to adult reproductive success. This study has shown that reproductive maturation in pubertal female opossums requires male stimuli, that this stimulus appears to be pheromonal, and that direct exposure to deposited male odors is the most effective stimulus for female reproductive maturation.
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