BioStor
Sign in using Mendeley
192 Zoological Society. PROCEEDINGS OF LEARNED SOCIETIES. ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. May 25, 1847— Harpur Gamble, Esq., M.D., in the Chair. The following communications were made to the Meeting : — 1. Note on the early generative power of the Goat. By John Davy, M.D., F.R.S., Inspector-General of Army Hospitals. In the young salmon, the par, we have the remarkable example, now well-authenticated, of the precocious development of the testes with functional activity. What I have witnessed in the young male goat in this island (Barbadoes) as regards its generative power, is hardly, it appears to me, less remarkable. I shall briefly notice the few circumstances which have come to my knowledge illustrating it ; such as I can state with certainty as facts. On the 2nd of May, 1846, a goat which belongs to me gave birth to two kids, a male and a female. When less than a month old, the former exhibited strongly the sexual propensity. When about five weeks old, the penis was protruded in his attempts to copulate. When four months old the mother was in heat, and was then covered and impregnated by hef offspring. Five months after, viz. on the 2nd of February, 1847, she gave birth to four kids — three females, one male, all of the usual size and vigorous. On the 10th of February I had the male kid castrated : each testis was about the size of a French bean. A little transparent fluid was obtained from the vas deferens, which under the microscope, viewed with a high power, exhibited some granules, a few fine fibres, and one that had the appearance of a pretty well-formed spermatozoon. The fluid procured from the in-cised substance of the testis contained many blood-corpuscles, some dark granules and a few small spermatozoa ; these were best seen after having been dried on the glass support. The young female received the male shortly after the mother, but was not then impregnated. It is said here that the goat breeds at six months old. It is also said that both male and female are two years in attaining their full size. The goat of Barbadoes appears to resemble in every respect the common goat of Europe, from whence it is supposed to have been originally brought. The precocity of the young male, as I have described it, and of the effect of which in its generative power there can be no doubt, as the female had access to no other male, is here not considered extra-ordinary. Whether the same function at so early an age is exer-cised in a cooler climate, I am ignorant. Should it be found to be so exercised, it may perhaps be considered a provision of nature to secure the preservation of the species, endangered by the localities

Identifiers

Export

Proceedings of Learned Societies

Annals And Magazine of Natural History 20: 192-208 (1847)

Reference added about 1 year ago

Tweet

Viewer

Page 192
Page 193
Page 194
Page 195
Page 196
Page 197
Page 198
Page 199
Page 200
Page 201
Page 202
Page 203
Page 204
Page 205
Page 206
Page 207
Page 208
Title
áàåäçéèÉöøüæœß
Authors
One author per line, "First name Last name" or "Last name, First name"
Journal
ISSN
OCLC
Series
Volume
Issue
Starting page
Ending page
Date
Year
URL
DOI
 Update 
blog comments powered by Disqus
Page loaded in 1.73725 seconds