A number of clinical and experimental studies have examined the effects of pregnancy on the cardiac baroreflex. The results obtained vary. For example, it has been reported that baroreflex sensitivity was decreased during pregnancy in women (Souma et al. 1983), in pregnant ewes (Ismay et al. 1979;Keller-Wood, 1995) and in pregnant rabbits (Cumbee et al. 1986). In other studies, however, it was found to be increased in women (Leduc et al. 1991), or unchanged in pregnant sheep (Magness & Rosenfeld, 1988). We therefore decided to compare baroreflex-mediated effects on the control of the heart rate of pregnant and non-pregnant ewes, using three different methods of analysis. By selective autonomic blockade we also measured the extent to which the sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves were responsible for baroreceptor effects on the heart. First we examined the arterial pressure-heart rate reflex by fitting an equation described by Kent et al. (1972) to the values for mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR), both obtained as mean values from 100 s records. Second, using the same 100 s records we determined the relationship between MAP and heart rate variability (HRV) measured as the coefficient of variation (c.v.) of the mean