Effects of genotype and cryopreservation of avian semen on fertility and number of perivitelline spermatozoa

Abstract
1. The fertility of freshly diluted and cryopreserved samples of semen obtained from a population of chickens selected for duration of fertility of cryopreserved spermatozoa (FS line) and its unselected control (FC line) were compared over a range of spermatozoa concentrations (10, 40, 80, and 160 × 106 sperm/50 μ1 insemination). 2. The spermatozoa of the FS line had greater fertility than spermatozoa of the FC line, whether freshly diluted or cryopreserved. Cryopreservation resulted in a reduction in fertility, regardless of line. There were no significant line by genotype interactions. 3. There were fewer spermatozoa from the FG line than the FS line found in the perivitelline membrane (perivitelline spermatozoa). The increase in number of perivitelline spermatozoa with increasing sperm concentration was greater in the FS than FC line. However, the slope of the increase in sperm number in the perivitelline membrane with increasing concentrations of cryopreserved spermatozoa was zero. 4. A minimum of 103 perivitelline spermatozoa must be found on day 2 post‐insemination for duration of fertility to exceed three days. The ability to produce spermatozoa capable of reaching the forming perivitelline membrane appears to be a quantitative, rather than a qualitative, trait and may be subject to genetic manipulation.
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