Q.48 Estrous and menstrual cycle are two types of cycles, that occur in female mammals. Both cycles begin after sexual maturity
in females. Reproductive hormones induce these cycles in females. These cycles happen in order to prepare female
mammals, for holding a child during pregnancy.
The primary difference between estrous and menstrual cycles is –
1. The endometrium shed by the uterus, during the estrous cycle, is reabsorbed, but the shed endometrium is excreted
from the body, during the menstrual cycles.
2. Behavioural changes, during estrous cycles are much less pronounced effects, on estrous cycle, than they do on
menstrual cycles.
3. Season and climate have less pronounced effects on estrous cycle, than they do on menstrual cycles.
4. Most estrous cycles are of much longer duration, compared to menstrual cycles.
Estrous vs Menstrual Cycle: Primary Difference
The primary difference between estrous and menstrual cycles is that the endometrium shed by the uterus is reabsorbed during the estrous cycle but excreted during menstrual cycles, making option 1 correct.
Cycle Fundamentals
Estrous cycles occur in most non-primate mammals (e.g., cows, dogs), while menstrual cycles are typical in primates like humans.
Both prepare the uterus for pregnancy via hormonal changes (FSH, LH, estrogen, progesterone), but differ in endometrial handling post-non-pregnancy.
Cycles repeat after sexual maturity to enable reproduction.
Correct Answer: Option 1
Option 1 identifies the core distinction: in estrous cycles, the uterine lining (endometrium) degenerates and is reabsorbed if no pregnancy occurs; in menstrual cycles, it sheds via bleeding (menses).
| Aspect | Estrous Cycle | Menstrual Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Endometrium Fate | Reabsorbed (no overt bleeding) | Shed and excreted (menstruation, ~3-5 days) |
| Occurrence | Non-primates | Primates (humans, apes) |
| Cycle Length | Varies (e.g., 17-21 days in livestock) | ~28 days |
Option Analysis
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Option 1 (Correct): Matches physiological reality—estrous endometrium is enzymatically broken down and reabsorbed during diestrus/metestrus; menstrual involves proteolytic shedding.
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Option 2 (Incorrect): Reversed—estrous cycles show pronounced behavioral estrus (“heat” phase with high receptivity); menstrual cycles have subtler or continuous receptivity.
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Option 3 (Incorrect): Opposite—estrous cycles in many species (e.g., deer) are seasonal/climate-dependent; menstrual cycles in humans are continuous year-round.
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Option 4 (Incorrect): False—estrous cycles are often shorter (e.g., 4-5 days in rodents) than the typical 28-day menstrual cycle.
This distinction is crucial for NEET biology, highlighting evolutionary adaptations in mammalian reproduction.