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Cooled Semen Basics
The collecting, processing, and shipping of equine semen requires
that very careful attention be paid to every single phase of the
process. One of the most important aspects of collecting and
processing semen, whether it is cooled semen or frozen semen, is
temperature. It is vitally important that every step be made
correctly to offer a viable product to the mare owner.
The collection of semen can be accomplished by using a jump mare or a
phantom to collect the stallion. Making sure that the semen
collection bottle is protected and maintained at a constant
temperature similar to the body temperature of the stallion is
important so that the semen is not shocked or killed during
collection.
Sanitary conditions must be maintained. I use plastic liners that are
discarded after each collection so sanitary conditions are met and no
contamination is made between collections. Adequate filtering is a
must to provide a clean usable product.
After the collection and straining are complete, then the sample must
be taken to the lab and tested to see if that sample is adequate for
shipping. The sample is placed into a machine that counts the number
of sperm per cc. Using this count along with the number of cc of
strained semen you have in the sample, you can figure the total
number of sperm in the collection.
After that you can check the sample with a microscope to see how many
progressive motile sperm you have. This is figured as a percentage of
progressive motile sperm and discounts all dead or abnormal moving
sperm in the sample.
If the number of progressive motility is adequate, the specimen is
ready to extend. It must be extended three parts extender to one part
semen to have adequate success with the shipment. Sometimes older
stallions require more extender than younger ones. The extender must
be compatible with the stallion. It is best to use an extender that
has an antibiotic added for shipping protection. The collector should
retain a sample of the specimen he ships and open it in 24 hours to
check motility to see what kind of product the customer received.
A note should be sent to the mare owner from the shipper of the semen
that gives you the name of the stallion collected, the collection
date and time, as well as the percent of progressive motility, the
extender used, and the dilution rate. It should also state the amount
of product shipped and the total number of live progressive motile
sperm in the sample. You should expect to receive at least 1 billion
sperm per shipment.
You should call your veterinarian and alert him of when the shipment
will arrive and give him the information for his evaluation. In
shipping semen there is only one goal: that is getting the mare
settled in foal. Every step you can provide to insure that is very
important to the success of the project.
For More Information Contact:
Jenson American Shires
9110 P-35, Blair, NE 68008
Tel: (402) 426-3198
FAX:
Internet:
ClarkJenson@huntel.net
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