Mare produces
three foals in one season

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Cal
Senorita, an American quarter horse on Mississippi
State University's South Farm, stands with her third
foal born in 2005. Cal delivered this filly on March
16. Two surrogate mothers delivered her colts on
Feb. 12 and Feb. 21. The two colts were products
of embryo transfer procedures performed last year
at MSU. |
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By Linda Breazeale
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The headline, "Mare produces three foals in one
season," reads like the front page of a grocery store
tabloid, but one Mississippi State University mare actually
accomplished this feat in 2005.
Super
Mom...
Described
by her former owner Buddy Wiggins as a star among cutting
horses at the age of 3, Cal Senorita's athletic efforts in
the arena resulted in career-ending leg problems. Wiggins
donated the American quarter horse with an outstanding
pedigree and more than $16,000 in earnings to MSU in 2000.
"I
wanted to give MSU the opportunity to improve the quality of
its horse herd with a champion like Cal," Wiggins said. "As
the daughter of Senorita's Playboy and Cal Gal, I knew she
would be a great asset in their breeding
program."
Retiring
to pasture at the young age of 6 might sound like the easy
life for a hard working athlete, but Cal's contributions
were not over. She delivered a foal in 2003 that sold for
$3,000 in the annual sale to help support the university's
livestock program, but her biggest feat came in the spring
of 2005. This beautiful, 11-year-old, sorrel-colored mare
produced three foals in less than five weeks.
Cal had
some help from two pasturemates whose offspring normally
would bring less than a third of the price that a foal from
a champion like Cal will bring. With the aid of embryo
transfer technology, surrogate mothers delivered colts by
Cal and two different sires (Blue Bayou Boon and Absolute
Acres) on Feb. 12 and Feb. 21 before Cal herself delivered a
filly on March 16 by a third sire (Cuttin Touch).
Surrogate
mothers...
Cal's
offspring are indebted to those surrogate mothers that
helped carry the load.
"Foaling
is dangerous for mares because they can easily be injured in
the process," said Dr. David Christiansen, a clinical
instructor in MSU's College of Veterinary Medicine.
"Pregnant mares may carry as much as 200 extra pounds, and
that can be hard on their bodies."
Christiansen
said healthy donors and surrogates are important in the
success rate of embryo transfers. He estimated the national
success rate to be near 50 percent, but pregnancy rates will
be much lower with older or problem mares and higher with
young, healthy horses.
"Our
surrogates are fully mature, but not old -- usually from 5
to 12 years of age," Christiansen said. "Proven mares that
have recently had healthy deliveries are among the best
options. Their health is critical for the foal throughout
its life."
Dr.
Richard Hopper, a professor in MSU's College of Veterinary
Medicine and diplomate of the American College of
Theriogenologists, said synchronizing the reproductive
cycles of both mares improves the environment in the
surrogate for the embryo to survive.
"Another
benefit is that if the mare does not become pregnant, she
will be ready in the subsequent estrus cycle for another
attempt," Hopper said. "The fertilized egg needs to be
mature enough by day 15 or 16 for the mare's body to
recognize the pregnancy and not go back into
heat."
Industry
benefits...
Suzy
Barnett manages Ranche One, a cutting horse farm in
Batesville. In the last few years, she has brought six mares
to MSU for embryo transfer, including two of her top
performers. Both champions -- each with earnings approaching
$300,000 -- experienced debilitating injuries that prevented
future competition. One was sidelined after two years as a
world champion and the other after a career that lasted just
seven months.
"Embryo
transfer gives us the opportunity to use their genes without
endangering the health of the horse, especially when a mare
is not capable of carrying a foal full term," Barnett
said.
All MSU
clients have the option of providing their own surrogate or
leasing one of the university's broodmares. Barnett has done
both in recent years. When MSU horses served as surrogates,
Barnett brought them back to Ranche One until
delivery.
"Transferring
embryos gives us the opportunity to produce foals using
surrogates while the donor mare is still competing. It also
enables us to get more than one foal off of a champion in
one year," Barnett said. "Up to four foals can be registered
from one mare in a single season."
What's
in it for us?
Peter
Ryan, an animal and dairy science associate professor, said
veterinary students as well as undergraduate students
benefit from their experiences with the equine reproduction
program.
"Embryo
transfer is not easy or routine, but it's doable. We have a
very good success rate here because the veterinarians work
so patiently with the animals," Ryan said. "This is a good
teaching opportunity for professors. The students get so
much more experience than they would in most other places.
That's the biggest value in our equine breeding
program."
Many
years ago, DVM students may only have had one opportunity to
perform a reproductive exam on a mare. Ryan said today's
students may do 100 before they graduate.
"Practice
builds their skill and confidence level. Because of the
increased number of horses, our students get to see more
problem cases as well," Ryan said. "This is a win-win-win
situation. The students win by seeing and learning from a
wide variety of cases; the university wins by having more
people involved to help work on a larger number of horses;
and the equine industry wins by having access to a facility
with lots of experience in reproduction."
Ryan,
who holds a joint appointment with the College of Veterinary
Medicine, said MSU mares delivered nearly 50 foals in 2004
and should deliver close to that number in 2005.
-30-
Released:
April 21, 2005
Contact: Dr. Peter Ryan, (662) 325-2938 or Dr. David
Christiansen, (662) 325-1348
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