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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Dog sperm head morphometry: its diversity and evolution

Ana AlambiagaJesús ContellMaria A MartíCarles SolerAnthony ValverdeAlmudena García-molinaMarcos Campos

subject

Canis familiaris ; cluster analysis; diversity; sperm morphometryMale0301 basic medicineendocrine systemVeterinary medicineSperm HeadUrologySemenInvited Original ArticleBreedingBiologylcsh:RC870-923Head shapediversitysperm morphometryStaffordshire Terrier03 medical and health sciencesDogs0302 clinical medicineSpecies SpecificityAnimalsCell ShapePhylogeny030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineCanis familiarisGeneral Medicinelcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. UrologyBiological EvolutionSpermatozoaSpermBreed030104 developmental biologyMorphometric analysisMultivariate AnalysisSperm HeadLabrador Retrievercluster analysis

description

Dogs have been under strong artificial selection as a consequence of their relationship with man. Differences between breeds are evident that could be reflected in seminal characteristics. The present study was to evaluate differences in sperm head morphometry between seven well-defined breeds of dog: the British Bulldog, Chihuahua, German Shepherd, Labrador Retriever, Spanish Mastiff, Staffordshire Terrier, and Valencian Rat Hunting dog. Semen samples were obtained by masturbation and smears stained with Diff-Quik. Morphometric analysis (CASA-Morph) produced four size and four shape parameters. Length, Ellipticity, and Elongation showed higher differences between breeds. MANOVA revealed differences among all breeds. Considering the whole dataset, principal component analysis (PCA) showed that PC1 was related to head shape and PC2 to size. Procluster analysis showed the British Bulldog to be the most isolated breed, followed by the German Shepherd. The PCA breed by breed showed the Chihuahua, Labrador Retriever, Spanish Mastiff, and Staffordshire Terrier to have PC1 related to shape and PC2 to size, whereas the British Bulldog, Valencia Rat Hunting dog, and German Shepherd had PC1 related to size and PC2 to shape. The dendrogram for cluster groupings and the distance between them showed the British Bulldog to be separated from the rest of the breeds. Future work on dog semen must take into account the large differences in the breeds′ sperm characteristics. The results provide a base for future work on phylogenetic and evolutionary studies of dogs, based on their seminal characteristics.

https://doi.org/10.4103/1008-682x.189207