Abstract: | Daily changes in the plasma progesterone concentrations were determined in eight mares treated with intramuscular injections of 250 μg cloprostenol, a prostaglandin analogue, followed five days later by 2500 I.U. human chorionic gonadotropin. A second cloprostenol injection was given 14 days after the first; the mares were then inseminated on the third and fifth day of the subsequent estrus and a second injection of human chorionic gonadotropin was administered on the fifth day. The onset of estrus following the second cloprostenol treatment was synchronized beginning three to four days after treatment in all eight mares. All eight ovulated, five mares conceived and only four foaled. Evaluation of the progesterone profiles provided reliable indicators of luteolysis, ovulation and luteal function. Decreasing plasma progesterone concentrations were associated with cloprostenol induced luteolysis or preceded spontaneous onset of estrus. The plasma progesterone concentrations increased consistently after ovulation, and in the pregnant mares, the progesterone concentrations remained high during the first month after insemination. |