Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Richard L. Stouffer
-
Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, USA
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (18 chapters)
-
-
Folliculogenesis
-
-
-
-
- Thomas A. Bicsak, Aaron J. W. Hsueh
Pages 35-47
-
- Gregor Westhof, Katsuhiko Fujimori, Sharon A. Tonetta, Karin Westhof, James Ireland, Jeffrey Fay et al.
Pages 49-60
-
- Stephen G. Hillier, Christopher R. Harlow, Helen J. Shaw, E. Jean Wickings, Alan F. Dixson, J. Keith Hodges
Pages 61-73
-
Ovulation and Superovulation
-
-
-
- William J. LeMaire, Thomas E. Curry Jr., Nobuyuki Morioka, Mats Brannstrom, Martin R. Clark, J. F. Woessner et al.
Pages 91-111
-
- Kenneth J. Ryan, Anastasia Makris
Pages 113-118
-
-
-
Corpus Luteum Function
-
Front Matter
Pages 161-161
-
- Anthony J. Zeleznik, James Hutchison
Pages 163-174
-
- H. R. Behrman, R. F. Aten, J. J. Ireland, L. K. Soodak, J. R. Pepperell, B. Musicki
Pages 175-189
-
- Lars Hamberger, Mats Hahlin, Bo Lindblom
Pages 191-205
-
- Richard L. Stouffer, Joseph S. Ottobre, Catherine A. VandeVoort
Pages 207-220
-
Corpus Luteum Function (Continued)
-
Front Matter
Pages 221-221
-
About this book
This 1987 ORPRC Symposium on Primate Reproductive Biology, the third in a series, marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Oregon Regional Primate Research Center (ORPRC). In organizing these symposia, we have emphasized the dedication of many ORPRC staff members to research with nonhuman primates as models for human reproduction. The first symposium in this series, organized by William Montagna, was held in May 1981. Appropriately for a beginning series, its topic was fetal endocrinology. The subject of this year's symposium was the primate ovary, and, as in the past, scientists from around the world, including Sweden, Scotland, England, West Germany, and India met in Beaverton, Oregon, to exchange ideas and information on this important "aspect of reproduction. The international scope of the symposium reflects our belief that both the problems and their solutions extend beyond national boundaries. Many of the nonhuman primates that we rely on as models are endangered as civilization, through population pressure, encroaches on their natural habitats. Without a deeper understanding of how primate reproduction is regulated, and without the control over human population that such an understanding can bring, the quality of life for all primate species may well become substantially diminished. Consequently, we dedicate these symposia to the thesis that a deeper understanding of primate reproductive biology will ultimately improve all primate life. Robert M. Brenner Charles H. Phoenix vii PREFACE Today there is renewed interest in the processes controlling the gametogenic and endocrine functions of the ovary.
Editors and Affiliations
-
Oregon Regional Primate Research Center, Beaverton, USA
Richard L. Stouffer