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Trends in Developmental Biology   Volumes    Volume 14 
Abstract
Maternal determinants of gestation length in the rhesus monkey
Christopher L. Coe, Gabriele R. Lubach
Pages: 63 - 72
Number of pages: 10
Trends in Developmental Biology
Volume 14 

Copyright © 2021 Research Trends. All rights reserved

ABSTRACT
 
A gestation length of normal duration and natural delivery at term are considered to be important indicators of a healthy pregnancy, especially given the potentially adverse consequences for neonates of being born premature. While many have assessed the factors influencing gestation length in humans, and there has been considerable interest in the pregnancy duration of domesticated farm animals, this topic has not been re-assessed recently in rhesus monkeys, the most commonly used primate in biomedical research. In older articles, it’s gestation length was typically reported to be 165 days, although most authors acknowledged that viable pregnancies could occur out to 180 days. Predicting the normal range of acceptable due dates has important veterinary implications for when to intervene in a prolonged pregnancy. Using archival records from a large, established breeding program, gestation lengths and infant birthweights were analyzed for 408 pregnancies across a 25-year period. The potential influence of maternal factors, including age and parity, was assessed. Familial concordance in gestation length within mother-daughter matrilines was examined, as well as similarity in length across repeat pregnancies for 84 multiparous females. Mean duration from mating to delivery was 168.8 days, longer than reported in most but not all previous articles. Many females birthed successfully at a longer duration that might have prompted consideration of a caesarian delivery. Gestation length for an individual female was fairly stable and significantly correlated across multiple pregnancies. There was not a pronounced transgenerational influence on gestation length even though familial propensities for birthing small and large infants were evident in the female descendants. Typical pregnancy lengths and birthweights are provided as reference norms to assist other breeding programs and to enhance our understanding of the natural reproduction of rhesus macaques that still live in many forested and urban locations across South Asia.

 

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