Publications by authors named "Rolf L Ingermann"

The study was designed to test the hypothesis that male aging is associated with a change in reproductive function in the zebrafish. Young (290 ± 37 d) and older (911 ± 48 d) males were combined with females (604 ± 24 d) to test the effect of male age on the number and fertility of eggs laid by their mates. 48% of breeding trials with young males and 25% of the trails with older males resulted in egg deposition.

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Before dilution in hypoosmotic media sperm of freshwater fish are maintained quiescent by a range of factors including osmolality, K+ and pH, and the onset of motility is generally associated with an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+. In contrast, Ca2+ in conjunction with osmolality was found to inhibit motility of intact bluegill sperm. Consistent with seminal plasma composition, 0.

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Motility of salmonid sperm is inhibited by the presence of carbon dioxide (CO2) in vitro; however, whether this occurs in response to challenges to the adult in vivo is not known. To determine whether CO2 negatively impacts sperm function in vivo, mature males were exposed to exhaustive exercise as well as to acute stress, chronic stress, tricaine anesthesia and environmental hypercapnia and sperm motility and semen CO2 tensions and pH values assessed. Semen CO2 rose and pH decreased significantly only in response to exhaustive exercise and environmental hypercapnia (13 kPa CO2).

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Although computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA) outperforms manual techniques, many investigators rely on non-automated analysis due to the high cost of commercial options. In this study, we have written and validated a free CASA software primarily for analysis of fish sperm. This software is a plugin for the free National Institutes of Health software ImageJ and is available with documentation at .

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Numerous publications show that methoxychlor (MXC), in use today as a DDT substitute, is a reproductive toxicant; it produces deleterious effects on the structure and function of the reproductive organs in exposed species. Exposure of mice (33 mg/kg body weight) to purified (95%) MXC at the time of implantation, or injection, of 5 mg MXC into freshly laid quail eggs prior to artificial incubation, altered sexual arousal and sexual behavior in adult males of both species. When placed near a plastic partition with an estrus female behind it, the MXC-exposed male mice showed no sexual arousal, spent less time near the partition, and exhibited lower testosterone levels.

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