New spaying chemical XR-107 (by blibber3)

This new chemical is a combination of REDACTED and REDACTED and will help curb the feral fluffy population.  The main focus of the REDACTED chemical is birth control and will prevent a mare from conceiving for upwards to six months and during that time the byproduct of REDACTED turns into an acid that weakens the mare's uterine wall and makes any further offspring not viable and renders them stillborn.  After the six months has passed REDACTED will no longer prevent the mare from becoming pregnant but offspring would be stillborn or in very rare cases (about one or two out of ten thousand) a viable child but due to a side effect the foal would emit the 'runt scent' prompting the mother to kill or neglect it.

As a test we gave Subject 36-C a spaying with XR-107.  Subject 36-C is an adult Earthie at two years of age with no health issues.  The following log is an observation of the effects of the compound chemical.

Day 1: We spayed her with XR-107 and she whined about it.  A simple treat and she forgot the pain.  She later asked for babies but told her she had to wait six months (told it to her as one cold time due to her being a feral) before she has children.  Her mood soured but she realized that eventual babies are better than none.  If only she knew.

Day 39:  To test the birth control aspect of XR-107 we let Subject 36-C have intercourse with a stallion the capture team picked up.  After seeing each other the two of them proceeded to mate.  After the stallion 'finished' we separated them to prevent any lasting attachments.

Day 47:  A week has passed and during a routine check no embryos have formed in her uterus.  Subject 36-C was puzzled since in her mind she should already be pregnant but when told it was 'human magic' she just went with it.  Subject was reminded that she can have babies in six months.

Day 94:  Subject started education for being a good mother.  As hugbox as this is we need to see how XR-107 affects throughout pregnancy and the less stress the Subject suffers the more accurate our results.

Day 156: Subject has ended education.  Test results came back and she passed.  If she was a domestic she would have been allowed children already.  A checkup showed that the birth control is wearing off.  Another month and we can begin Phase 2 of the experiment.

Day 183: The six months have passed.  The birth control portion of XR-107 will have worn off by now.  Phase 2 shall now begin to determine how viable any children are with a mother that has XR-107 in the body.

Day 184: Subject 36-C has been impregnated.  To increase chances we used sperm from 3 different stallions.

Day 191: Subject 36-C is now pregnant.  During check up the doctor discovered embryos forming in her uterus.  Now to wait for the results.

Day 212: Subject has given birth.  XR-107 is a success with its secondary function rendering any foals stillborn.  We know the chance is rare but we need to know what effects it would have if a foal is born alive.

Day 453: It happened finally.  A live foal was born from Subject 36-C.  Female, pegasus, and good coloration.  Normally, a foal like this would be cared by the mother but upon birth she was rejected for 'runt smell' but all vitals are green on the foal.  Maybe XR-107 gives any surviving foals runt smell so that the mothers reject her?  Need to test more.

Day 657: After numerous tests we can definitively say that XR-107 has a side effect of giving any surviving offspring 'runt smell' and making any mare reject them leading to death of it within a half hour at best.  We market this to veterinarian clinics next month.

Day 740: Subject 36-C has died.  She drowned in her water bowl during the night.  Main cause is depression due to the constant stillbirths.  Still, the experiment is closing today anyway so death to her would be better than the alternative if she was still alive.

18 Likes

I’m surprised the runt smell won out over an overwhelming desire to have a live baby.

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Mare would kill the ‘runt’ and not think anything of it until all the babies are clean and discovered stillborn. Took a massive toll on her mental health.

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That’s a good point. Fluffies aren’t known for foresight.

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That gives an idea for controlling feral populations.

A chemical or bio agent that doesn’t kill, but it makes EVERY foal the mare has for the rest of its life smell and taste like a runt, even if they’re actually fine. Maybe for good measure, the mare’s milk also becomes nausea inducing, so the foals vomit like runts would and eventually starve to death.

Something this mild could be marketed as a safer option since it wouldn’t do anything bad to other animals.

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This is brilliant!

That’s one interesting anti foal. Well breeders better be careful using it if thats how dangerous to mares.

Im sure rival fluffy farms would use that to sabotage the competition. :thinking:

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And that’s why this stuff is strictly regulated for veterinarian use only.

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