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Doe cycle
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<blockquote data-quote="megalomaniac" data-source="post: 5506633" data-attributes="member: 2805"><p>Totally different than humans then!</p><p></p><p>But again, I'm not an expert on whitetail ovulation timing... deer may be more similar to cattle.</p><p></p><p>But whats really crazy are alpacas... my cousin farms them. They ovulate at any time, not on a heat cycle... but only after a male romances them for a period of time rubbing their front legs on their mid section... which stimulates the females to ovulate... then they mate as ovulation occurs...at least that what he tells me, and he is a wildlife biologist and one of the most knowledgeable alpaca farmers in TN.</p><p></p><p>But bottom line is that the egg is only viable for a short period of time after ovulation with most mammals, while sperm is viable for longer in the genital tract. Copulation before ovulation can result in a viable pregnancy, but copulation a day after ovulation will not likely result in a successful pregnancy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="megalomaniac, post: 5506633, member: 2805"] Totally different than humans then! But again, I'm not an expert on whitetail ovulation timing... deer may be more similar to cattle. But whats really crazy are alpacas... my cousin farms them. They ovulate at any time, not on a heat cycle... but only after a male romances them for a period of time rubbing their front legs on their mid section... which stimulates the females to ovulate... then they mate as ovulation occurs...at least that what he tells me, and he is a wildlife biologist and one of the most knowledgeable alpaca farmers in TN. But bottom line is that the egg is only viable for a short period of time after ovulation with most mammals, while sperm is viable for longer in the genital tract. Copulation before ovulation can result in a viable pregnancy, but copulation a day after ovulation will not likely result in a successful pregnancy [/QUOTE]
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