INCIDENCE OF CERTAIN INFERTILITY PROBLEMS AMONG COWS AND BUFFALOES IN UPPER EGYPT | ||||
Assiut Veterinary Medical Journal | ||||
Article 30, Volume 10.1, Issue 19, June 1982, Page 205-214 PDF (1.95 MB) | ||||
Document Type: Research article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/avmj.1982.191895 | ||||
View on SCiNiTO | ||||
Authors | ||||
B.H. SERUR; A.A. FARRAG; A. GOMAA | ||||
Dept. of Obstetrics, Gynacology & A.1. Faculty of Vet. Med. Assiut University | ||||
Abstract | ||||
1. 1857 infertile cattle and buffaloes including 605 cows (50 heifers and 555 cows) 1252 buffaloes ( 160 heiters and 1094 buffaloes ) were studied from gynecological p < /strong>oint of view in Assiut, Menia and Sohag p < /strong>rovinces. 2. The incidence of anoestrum was higher in buffaloes, cows and heifers ( 73.90% and 88.75%) than in cattle ( 49.9% and 54.0% ). 3 - Ovarian inactivity was the more frequent form of ancestrum in cattle and buffaloes. The total incidence was higher in buffaloes (81.04%) than in cattle (74.73%). 4. Very low incidence of persistant CL was recorded in heifers(cattle and buffaloes), while in cows it was higher (19.86% in cattle and 12.14 in buffaloes). 5- The incidence of silent heat was slightly higher in buffaloes than cattle. It was higher in heifers than cows. 6- The incidence of rep < /strong>eat breeding syndrome was higher in buffaloe: cows than heifers. The percentage of rep < /strong>eat breeding with ap < /strong>parent healthy genetalia was slightly higher in cows than heifers, while that with endometritis was higher in both cows and buffaloes in the three provinces than that with cervicitis only. | ||||
Statistics Article View: 80 PDF Download: 121 |
||||