Functional sperm assessments of African Lion Panthera leo (Mammalia: Carnivora: Felidae) in field conditions release_y2gn3rtfkzbclp42wzw24a2xjq

by Thiesa Butterby Soler Barbosa, Daniel Angrimani, Bruno Rui, João Losano, Luana Bicudo, Marcel Henrique Blank, Marcilio Nichi, Cristiane Schilbach Pizzutto

Published in Journal of Threatened Taxa by Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society.

2019   Volume 11, p13114-13119

Abstract

Wild African Lion Panthera leo populations are decreasing due to inbreeding and reduced genetic variability.  Thus, the use of assisted reproduction in the species could one day become essential.  Before this is possible, however, studies need to be conducted on the basic reproductive traits of  the species, especially those regarding sperm cells.  This study aimed to analyze the semen of African Lions in field conditions.  We included seven captive African Lions in our study.  The animals were chemically restrained and electro-ejaculated.  Twenty sperm samples were selected and analyzed for sperm motility and progressive motility, sperm motility index, and sperm morphology.  In addition, the samples were analyzed for membrane and acrosome integrity (hypoosmotic swelling test and fast green/rose Bengal dyes, respectively) and assessed for cytochemical activity of the mitochondria.  We found that sperm motility rate was 75.25%±2.03, progressive motility rate was 3.25%±0.10, and sperm motility index was 70.12%±1.71.  We found morphologic abnormalities roughly at the expected rate with 34.61%±7.22 of the sperm cells having an intact plasma membrane and acrosome integrity of 92.27%±2.73; high mitochondrial activity was 54.26±4.88% and absence of mitochondrial activity was 2.72±0.68% in the sperm cells.  These findings show that conventional tests for sperm motility and sperm morphology bring about the expected results for lions according scientific literature.  Though a hypoosmotic swelling test may be performed using different concentrations, it might lead to a higher number of sperm cells with membrane damage.  Fast green/rose Bengal stain and 3'3 diaminobenzidine assay, however, can be used in sperm analysis of lions in field conditions.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   1.9 MB
file_jqjkgtul7vao3exjx4bqv36cmu
www.threatenedtaxa.org (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2019-01-26
Journal Metadata
Open Access Publication
In DOAJ
In ISSN ROAD
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  0974-7893
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 0b557dd2-02f3-44b4-a56d-4575065e60ac
API URL: JSON