Equine Embryo Transfer Technology
Embryo transfer is a technique where a 6-8 day old embryo is flushed from
the uterus of a donor mare and is then transferred into a recipient mare
or frozen to be transferred at a later date. The production of foals using
embryo transfer (ET) is commonplace in North America but is limited to a very
small number of horses, creating little or no impact or genetic gain. One
factor limiting the wide-spread use of ET in horses is cost. Another is the
lack of commercially available embryos for sale. In cattle, ET is used extensively
and creates significant economic and genetic gain for the industry. The acceptance
of ET in cattle came about after embryos could be frozen, and more importantly
when the evolving technology became simpler, more reliable and inexpensive,
allowing technicians and farmers to transfer these embryos successfully into
recipient cows. Embryo Transfer and frozen semen is now available through
Equine Embryos Inc.
Opportunities for Embryo Transfer
- Allows horse breeders access to a wider genetic pool.
- Allows owners of good mares to obtain offspring from their mares and to profit from the sale of embryos.
- Mares can be bred throughout the year and the resulting embryos can be transferred at a convenient time (i.e. in the spring).
- Flexibility in importing and exporting of equine genetics.
- Allows horse enthusiasts to purchase the best quality horses at a fraction of the price of a live horse.
Cost of Producing a Foal
Breeding a mare can be an expensive proposition. The cost of producing
a foal depends on the initial value of the donor mare, and therefore her
yearly depreciation. Additional costs are the cost of maintaining the mare,
veterinary costs, semen costs, etc. By using embryo transfer (ET), the costs
of maintaining recipient mares must be added; the fertility of the stallion,
the success to obtain the embryo and achieve a pregnancy influence
the final cost.
The main cost of producing a foal comes from the depreciation of the dam.
Embryo transfer allows a mare to produce more foals per year and therefore
reduces the per-foal depreciation cost. The second most important cost
of producing pregnancies using ET comes from the maintenance of suitable
recipient mares before transfer. At least three recipient mares have to
be available per donor mare, so at the time of transfer one will be in good
reproductive synchrony with the donor mare. New technology has enabled us
to freeze horse embryos so now we need to have fewer recipient mares, reducing
the overall cost. The cost of semen, is low in comparison to all the other
expenses. This shows that only the best stallions must be used, even if they
are more expensive.
The following table illustrates the cost of producing a foal using three
different methods. This table illustrates that when one has a valuable mare,
producing a foal by ET is more economical, by having an inexpensive mare
carry the pregnancy. This added efficiency is the result of the donor mare
producing several foals per year, as opposed as one.
If you want to know about the cost of our ET service
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