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  4. Electroejaculation and semen buffer evaluation in the microbat Carollia perspicillata

Electroejaculation and semen buffer evaluation in the microbat Carollia perspicillata

Author(s)
Fasel, Nicolas Jean
Helfenstein, Fabrice  
Laboratoire d'éco-physiologie évolutive  
Buff, Samuel
Richner, Heinz
Date issued
March 1, 2015
In
Theriogenology
Vol
5
No
83
From page
904
To page
910
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
Electroejaculation Microchiroptera Sperm mobility Semen extender Sperm competition
Abstract
Scientific interests and conservation needs currently stress the necessity to better understanding bat reproductive biology. In this study, we present the first, safe, inexpensive, and reliable method to obtain sperm from a microbat species (Carollia perspicillata) by electroejaculation. This method revealed to be highly efficient (100% success rate). We obtained ejaculates composed of two characteristically different fractions. We compared three buffers and recommend using an Earle's balanced salt solution as a semen extender. Earle's balanced salt solution provided significant repeatable measure of swimming ability (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.74, P < 0.01) and proportion of motile sperms (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.08, P = 0.01) and allowed sperm to maintain optimal swimming capacity over time. None of the buffers could dissolve all the coagulated sperm. Although the trypsin buffer freed a larger fraction of spermatozoa in the ejaculate, it impaired swimming ability without improving motility, viability, and stamina. We thus argue that the sperm population analyzed with Earle's balanced salt solution is a representative of the ejaculate. Finally, we found that the mean sperm velocity of C perspicillata (78.8 μm/s) is lower than that predicted by regressing sperm velocity on relative testes mass, a proxy of sperm competition. The question as to whether C perspicillata is an outsider for sperm velocity, or whether bats evolved yet another unique mechanism to cope with sperm competition deserves more investigations.
Project(s)
Oxidative stress in avian semen: causes and consequences for male reproductive tactics  
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/50843
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