Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where R. A. Bellows is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by R. A. Bellows.


Theriogenology | 1992

Superovulation of cattle with equine pituitary extract and porcine ESH

R. B. Staigmiller; R. A. Bellows; G.B. Anderson; G.E. Seidel; W.D. Foote; Alfred R. Menino; Raymond W. Wright

Superovulation has been practiced in cattle for more than 50 years but the results have been highly variable. Scientists at six locations compared a horse pituitary extract (HAP) with a single batch of porcine FSH (pFSH) to determine the efficacy of these hormones to induce superovulation and to test for variability in the superovulatory response. Acetone-dried equine pituitaries were suspended in 40% ethanol containing 6% ammonium acetate, and the supernatant was mixed with 2.5 volumes of cold ethanol. The resulting precipitate was washed with cold ether and dried. Total doses of 18 mg of HAP and 36 mg of pFSH were injected intramuscularly (i.m.) over 4 days, two injections per day, and prostaglandin (PGF(2)alpha; 25 mg, i.m.) was administered on Day 3. Injections were begun on Days 6 to 13 of the estrous cycle. The overall ovulation rates (mean +/- SEM) for HAP and FSH were 8.8 +/- 0.7 and 15.1 +/- 1.0, respectively (n=231; P<0.01). Location interacted (P<0.01) with the type of gonadotropin for the ovulation rate. When expressed as a proportion of the number of corpora lutea, the total number of embryos recovered was greater (P=0.03) for pFSH than for HAP, but there was no difference in the number of Quality 1 and 2 embryos. The results show that HAP can induce a satisfactory superovulatory response, but there was no evidence of reduced variability of response to HAP compared with pFSH.


Theriogenology | 1979

Multiple linear and nonlinear regression analyses of factors causing calving difficulty

R. E. Short; R. A. Bellows; R. B. Staigmiller; J. B. Carr

Calving difficulty (CD) was analyzed as the dependent variable from observations on 592 first-calf, 2-year-old heifers that were either Angus X Hereford (AH), Charolais X AH or Simmental X AH. Independent variables were birth weight (BW), pelvic area (PA), BW.(33), PA.(5), cow weight (CW), cow condition score (CS) and sex of calf (S). CD was analyzed as score (1 = no difficulty through 4 = extreme difficulty) CD-I, % CD (1 vs 2 + 3 + 4 , CD-II) or % high CD (1 + 2 vs 3 + 4 , CD-III). R(2) values from CD-II and CD-III multiple correlation (R) analyses were consistently lower (.10 to .13) than from the CD-I analysis. When only BW and PA were included in the model, R(2) values for CD-I were .36, .39 and .39 for the linear, quadratic and cubic analyses, respectively. When BW, PA, CW, CS and S were included in the model, the R(2) values for CD-I were .40 and .42 for the linear and quadratic analyses (cubic effects were not tested). In the linear analysis with BW.(33) and PA.(5), the R(2) for CD-I was .36. In all analyses, the order of importance of the factors studied was BW and PA, with a much lower contribution from CW and S. CS did not account for a significant increase in R(2) in any analysis. CD remained below 50% whenever the PA BW ratio exceeded 8.4. This ratio is a convenient practical method to relate PA and BW to CD. Conclusions are that the linear effects of BW and PA account for the majority of the identified variation in CD (R(2)) and that small increases in R(2) can be obtained by adding CW, CS and S to the model and/or by expanding the model to include quadratic effects.


Theriogenology | 1990

Influence of sire, sex of fetus and type of pregnancy on conceptus development.

R. A. Bellows; R. E. Short; G.P. Kitto; R. B. Staigmiller; M.D. MacNeil

Estrus was synchronized in 93 crossbred cows 3 to 7 yr old which were then superovulated with 10 mg FSH-P and bred artificially to either a Jersey or Charolais bull. Females pregnant to the Jersey sire were slaughtered at 95, 180 or 250 d of gestation; low pregnancy rate from the Charolais sire resulted in enough dams for slaughter and valid comparisons at 95 d only. Conceptus tissue and organ weights and dam carcass weights and measurements were collected at slaughter. At 95 d of gestation, sire differences were not significant; type of pregnancy (single vs multiple) had significant effects on placentome and membrane weight; fetus sex had highly significant effects on fetus weight and crown-rump length. Fetal brain and heart weights showed little effect of sire, fetus sex or type of pregnancy, indicating these early differentiating tissues are highly competitive for available nutrients for growth. Fetal data at 180 and 250 d of gestation showed highly significant effects of gestation stage on placentome, membrane and fetus weights, crown-rump and metatarsal lengths, and liver, kidney, heart and total brain weights. Type of pregnancy had greater effects on the conceptus traits than did fetus sex at these stages. Nonorthogonal analyses of data from the Jersey-sired pregnancies indicated growth of fetuses in multiple pregnancies was suppressed, and the reduction in fetus weight became more pronounced as gestation progressed. Correlations among conceptus traits and dam carcass data showed different relationships within single and multiple pregnancies. We suggest that the genetic contribution for fetal growth has a positive effect on fetal size throughout gestation while the importance of metabolite availability may change during gestation depending on the genetic growth potential of the fetus and on whether the pregnancy is single or multiple. We speculate that these fetus-dam relationships involve systems controlling fetus growth that arise from the fetus genetic growth potential interacting with positive and negative dam effects that are linked or related to the carcass skeletal-fat-muscle endpoints studied.


Theriogenology | 1983

Clitoral stimulation and the effect of age, breed, technician, and postpartum interval on pregnancy rate to artificial insemination in beef cattle

D.D. Lunstra; W.G. Hays; R. A. Bellows; D.B. Laster

An experiment was conducted to assess the effect of clitoral stimulation on pregnancy rate to artificial insemination in 1,856 beef females. For unadjusted data, pregnancy rate to first service in nonstimulated females was 61% for cows and 59% for heifers, and that of females receiving clitoral stimulation was 69% for cows and 58% for heifers. After adjusting the data for the influences of age, breed, technician, and postpartum interval, clitoral stimulation increased first service pregnancy rate in cows (74+/-3% vs 59+/-3%, P<0.05), but not in heifers (53+/-5% vs 57+/-5%, P>0.10). Postpartum interval significantly influenced pregnancy rate, regardless of treatment, and clitoral stimulation was beneficial when applied to cows with relatively short postpartum intervals. Variation in the effect of clitoral stimulation on pregnancy rate was observed among technicians. Clitoral stimulation improved pregnancy rate more effectively in 3 to 4 year old cows than in cows 2 years old and cows 5 years of age or older. We concluded that clitoral stimulation at the time of artificial insemination was an effective means of increasing pregnancy rate in cows, but not in heifers.


Theriogenology | 1979

Effect of mating stimuli on LH release in bulls.

R. E. Short; R.D. Randel; R. A. Bellows

Fourteen crossbred beef bulls were assigned at random to receive one of four sexual stimuli treatments. Treatments consisted of: (1) controls (four bulls), no visual or physical contact with any cows; (2) false mount (two bulls), allowed to mount an estrual cow; (3) mated (four bulls), allowed to mount an estrual cow with intromission and ejaculation; (4) electroejaculated (four bulls), no exposure to cows. Serum from blood samples taken at 15-min intervals from -15 min to 2 hr from sexual stimuli were radioimmunoassayed for luteinizing hormone (LH). Four bulls had elevated levels at the pretreatment bleeding, but none of the stimuli induced or were associated with LH releases. Basal levels of LH were consistent within bulls but varied considerably among bulls. Conclusion is that stimuli associated with mating do not cause a release of LH.


Theriogenology | 1979

Steroid levels after intramuscular injection of radioactive estradiol-17β, estrone, progesterone and testosterone in the bovine☆

R.D. Randel; R. E. Short; R. A. Bellows

Eight 2 year old Hereford cows from days 8 to 12 of the estrous cycle were injected intramuscularly with 5 ml of corn oil containing 5 mg of estradiol-17beta (two cows), estrone (two cows), progesterone (two cows) or testosterone (two cows). Each cow treated with estradiol received 494 microc of estradiol-17beta-6, 7 H3 and each cow treated with estrone received 492 microc of estrone-6, 7 H3. Each cow treated with progesterone or testosterone received 400 muc of H3 compound labeled in the 7 position. Total urine was collected by urethral catheterization of the cows treated with estrogens. Blood samples for plasma and serum were collected via jugular cannulae. Blood and urine samples from estrogen-treated cows were collected hourly for the first 24 hr, at 2 hr intervals for the next 26 hr, at 4 hr intervals for the next 12 hr and at 12 hr intervals until background was reached. Blood samples were collected hourly from 1 to 8 hr after injection from progesterone or testosterone-treated cows. Plasma and serum levels of radioactive estradiol-17beta, estrone, progesterone and testosterone were similar. Blood levels of radioactivity peaked at 2 hr post-injection in cows receiving estradiol-17beta and at 3 hr in cows receiving estrone. Blood levels of labeled estradiol-17beta and estrone were nondetectable by 54 hr and 83 hr, respectively. Peak urinary excretion of radioactivity was reached at 7 hr for estradiol-17beta and at 14 hr for estrone and nondetectable levels were reached by 95 hr for estradiol-17beta and 14 hr for estrone. At these times, 15.5% of the total dose of radioactive estradiol-17beta and 17.5% of the injected estrone had been excreted in the urine. Peak blood and urinary excretion levels were reached earlier for radioactive estradiol-17beta than for estrone, and excretion of estradiol-17beta was completed more rapidly. No difference was found in plasma and serum levels for any steroid studies; thus, endogenous steroid titers in blood plasma and serum are not different in the cow.


Journal of Animal Science | 1990

Physiological mechanisms controlling anestrus and infertility in postpartum beef cattle.

R. E. Short; R. A. Bellows; R. B. Staigmiller; J. G. Berardinelli; E. E. Custer


Journal of Animal Science | 1971

Relationships among weight gains, age at puberty and reproductive performance in heifers.

R. E. Short; R. A. Bellows


Journal of Animal Science | 1971

Cause and Effect Relationships Associated with Calving Difficulty and Calf Birth Weight

R. A. Bellows; R. E. Short; D. C. Anderson; Bradford Knapp; O. F. Pahnish


Journal of Animal Science | 1978

Effects of Precalving Feed Level on Birth Weight, Calving Difficulty and Subsequent Fertility

R. A. Bellows; R. E. Short

Collaboration


Dive into the R. A. Bellows's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. E. Short

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. B. Staigmiller

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. B. Carr

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bradford Knapp

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. C. Anderson

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elaine E. Grings

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. E. Howland

United States Department of Agriculture

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge