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wildlife contraceptive : ウィキペディア英語版
wildlife contraceptive
Wildlife contraceptives of various kinds are under development. Contraceptives such as these are intended to control population growth among both tame and wild animals.
In 1971, Jay Kirkpatrick was asked by Ron Hall to find out if there was a way to prevent wild mares from getting pregnant. Local residents overheard some of Kirkpatricks' students discussing the plan and a moral panic ensued.〔http://conservationmagazine.org/2008/07/wildlife-contraception/〕
White-tailed deer may be controlled with contraceptives in suburban areas, where they are sometimes a nuisance. In parts of the United States, does are shot with darts containing a contraceptive vaccine, rendering them temporarily infertile.〔Schuerman, M. (Birth Control for Deer?. ) ''Audubon'' February 8, 2002.〕 The Humane Society of the United States runs a deer birth control program, but it is experimental; it may not be cost-effective in the long run.〔〔Barr, C. W. (A Deer Contraceptive Is Turning Off the Heat. ) ''Washington Post'' August 19, 2004.〕 It may cost $300〔 to $1000〔 per deer.
The vaccine used is porcine zona pellucida (PZP), or derivatives.〔Broache, A. (Oh Deer! ) ''Smithsonian'' October 2005.〕 This form of immunocontraception prevents sperm from accessing an ovum.〔 Another form of deer contraception, called GonaCon, produces antibodies to sex drive hormones in the deer, causing them to lose interest in mating.〔McGrath, M. (Deer 'pill' curbs aggressive mating. ) BBCNews September 1, 2011.〕
Similar forms of injectable contraceptive are being studied for use in elk〔Boyle, R. (Birth Control for Animals. ) ''Popular Science'' March 3, 2009.〕 and gray squirrels.〔Dalhouse, D. (Squirrel contraceptive research under way. ) Clemson University News March 10, 2008.〕
Oral contraceptives may also be developed for population control among a variety of animals, including deer, feral pigs, coyotes, cougars, dogs and cats.〔(Oral Contraceptives Could Work For Dogs, Cats, Pigs, Maybe Even Deer And Coyotes. ) ''Science News'' February 25, 2008.〕
Pigeons have been a target for experimental contraceptives for decades.〔Mooallem, J. (Pigeon Wars. ) ''New York Times'' October 15, 2006.〕 An oral contraceptive is in use for the control of Canada geese.〔
A slow-release hormonal contraceptive implant for female Tasmanian devils is under development. While it may seem counter-intuitive to develop contraceptives for an endangered animal, their use is intended to promote the wild behaviour of mating freely, but without certain females over-contributing to the next generation, which "can have long-term genetic consequences for the insurance population". Contraceptive trials in male devils showed that their testosterone increased, instead of decreasing as other male mammals' testosterone does.
==See also==

*Neutering

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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