oliverstoned wrote:Well lets say your Storm Cats groom and.......blech.... and you own a stallion and a few mares whats to stop the ol switcheroo.
DNA.
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casallc wrote:Horse semen doesn't tolerate freezing very well. Freezing will kill all sperm cells after freezing of half the horses, the other half will lose at least half of the motility. Horse semen is not as durable as cattle or humans sperm. If you could find it, most likely it wouldn’t work.
Every thoroughbred today is DNA tested...and yes,the JC will know.oliverstoned wrote:Doh! Yea? Oh well I did read somewhere that they did some random DNA tests on TB horses and a surprising % were not what they were supposed to be. It was was due probaly to farms of yesteryear making breeding mistakes on the farm ie. grabbing the wrong mare out of the field or maybe even the Stud had too many covers that day so just grab the other one kind of thing." Who will ever know"
pokeyman wrote:casallc wrote:Horse semen doesn't tolerate freezing very well. Freezing will kill all sperm cells after freezing of half the horses, the other half will lose at least half of the motility. Horse semen is not as durable as cattle or humans sperm. If you could find it, most likely it wouldn’t work.
Huh!! We use it all the time with our breeding program!! It works just fine......
On another note, plenty of TBs breed other TBs via frozen or fresh semen. Unfortunately, they are not able to be Jockey Club registered but many are registered elsewhere like the Performance Horse Registry or a Warmblood registry.
casallc wrote:pokeyman wrote:casallc wrote:Horse semen doesn't tolerate freezing very well. Freezing will kill all sperm cells after freezing of half the horses, the other half will lose at least half of the motility. Horse semen is not as durable as cattle or humans sperm. If you could find it, most likely it wouldn’t work.
Huh!! We use it all the time with our breeding program!! It works just fine......
On another note, plenty of TBs breed other TBs via frozen or fresh semen. Unfortunately, they are not able to be Jockey Club registered but many are registered elsewhere like the Performance Horse Registry or a Warmblood registry.
The biggest disadvantage of frozen semen today is the individual freezing variability; stallions vary in fertility with frozen semen. About 20-30% of stallions with normal semen quality will produce semen that freezes extremely well, another 40% produce semen that freezes modestly well and approximately 30% of those stallions don't freeze well at all.
Conception rates of artificial insemination with frozen semen are lower than with fresh semen, although with a good freezing technique and well managed mares, conception rates of 60-65% can be reached.
http://www.equinecentre.unimelb.edu.au/ ... o_ai.shtml
The percentages vary a little but the statement is valid. Cooled semen is another story with better results.
Lei Owen wrote:casallc wrote:pokeyman wrote:casallc wrote:Horse semen doesn't tolerate freezing very well. Freezing will kill all sperm cells after freezing of half the horses, the other half will lose at least half of the motility. Horse semen is not as durable as cattle or humans sperm. If you could find it, most likely it wouldn’t work.
Huh!! We use it all the time with our breeding program!! It works just fine......
On another note, plenty of TBs breed other TBs via frozen or fresh semen. Unfortunately, they are not able to be Jockey Club registered but many are registered elsewhere like the Performance Horse Registry or a Warmblood registry.
The biggest disadvantage of frozen semen today is the individual freezing variability; stallions vary in fertility with frozen semen. About 20-30% of stallions with normal semen quality will produce semen that freezes extremely well, another 40% produce semen that freezes modestly well and approximately 30% of those stallions don't freeze well at all.
Conception rates of artificial insemination with frozen semen are lower than with fresh semen, although with a good freezing technique and well managed mares, conception rates of 60-65% can be reached.
http://www.equinecentre.unimelb.edu.au/ ... o_ai.shtml
The percentages vary a little but the statement is valid. Cooled semen is another story with better results.
That article is 4 year's old!
One advantage of using frozen nowaday's is the fact that you have the semen on hand at the optium time for the mare. We've gone the cooled route and let me tell you, that was a pain in the tush!
As far a collecting thoroughbred's you'd have to teach them to use a phatom.I guess you could stuff an examining sleeve into the mare.