Energy balance of pregnant vicunas (Vicugna vicugna) in the Chilean High Andes

datacite.alternateIdentifier.citationAustral journal of veterinary sciences, Vol. 51, N° 1, 33-36, 2019
datacite.alternateIdentifier.doi10.4067/S0719-81322019000100106
datacite.creatorNorambuena Ardiles, María
datacite.creatorMussa Valenzuela, Karen
datacite.creatorHernández Henríquez , Francisca
datacite.creatorAlfaro Diaz, Jorge
datacite.creatorVelasco, Miriam
datacite.date2019
datacite.subjectEstado nutricional
datacite.subjectBalance energético negativo
datacite.subject.englishVicuña
datacite.subject.englishNutritional status
datacite.subject.englishNegative energy balance
datacite.titleEnergy balance of pregnant vicunas (Vicugna vicugna) in the Chilean High Andes
dc.coverageLos Andes
dc.coverageChile
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-30T16:25:28Z
dc.date.available2021-04-30T16:25:28Z
dc.description.abstractEnergy unbalance may be the cause of low fertility rates found in vicunas. The objective of this study was to estimate the temporal variation of the nutritional status in pregnant vicunas from a herd kept under captivity in the Chilean High Andes. The hypothesis under study is that animals are able to maintain the energy balance during the dry season. Six pregnant vicunas were examined in August, October and January (year 2015-2016). Reproductive status was estimated by ultrasonography and plasma progesterone concentration. Live weight (LW) and body condition score (BCS: 1-5 scale) were measured for each animal. A blood sample was taken to estimate the plasma concentrations of total protein (Biuret method), cholesterol (CHODPAP method), triglycerides (GPO-PAP method), beta-hydroxybutyrate (enzymatic method) and non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA; enzymatic colorimetric method). Vicuna groups had similar LW, BCS, plus similar plasma concentrations of metabolites, total protein and progesterone. Females did not increase their LW during gestation and their BCS in January (2.9) was below the recommendations for late pregnancy in camelids (BCS 3.5). NEFA and beta-hydroxybutyrate values were higher than those expected under nutritional energy balance signalling a lipolytic and ketogenic metabolic response, respectively. The absence of weight gain and the values of NEFA and beta-hydroxybutyrate show that pregnant vicunas suffer a negative energy balance during the dry season in the Chilean High Andes. This can cause abortion and contribute to low fertility rates of the herds. It is suggested to provide pregnant vicunas with food supplements up to birthing, in years of severe drought.
dc.formatPDF
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositoriodigital.uct.cl/handle/10925/2570
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversidad Austral de Chile
dc.rightsObra bajo licencia Creative Commons Atribución 4.0 Internacional
dc.sourceAustral journal of veterinary sciences (Valdivia)
oaire.resourceTypeArtículo de Revista
uct.carreraMedicina Veterinaria
uct.catalogadorbmc
uct.comunidadRecursos Naturales
uct.facultadFacultad de Recursos Naturales
uct.indizacionSCIELO
uct.indizacionScopus
uct.indizacionSCI EXPANDED
uct.nucleosNúcleo en Producción Alimentaria
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Artículo Recursos Naturales