Peripheral levels of estradiol [E2] testosterone [T] and progesterone [P] were characterized during pregnancy in strains [C57BL/6J, AKR/J, C3H/J, DBA/25] of mice which differ in prenatal survival following genetic selection. Strain variation in the secretory pattern of these hormones was minimal during the period that requires pituitary support of luteal function. In every line examined, a midpregnancy increase in circulating T occurred, followed by a 2nd increase in T late in gestation. E levels also increased during the latter half of pregnancy, except in a line selected for rapid growth. In general, P levels increased from midpregnancy until shortly before parturition. Dramatic strain differences in hormone levels and their secretory pattern during the 2nd half of pregnancy suggest that placental-ovarian function has changed in response to selection more than has pituitary control over ovarian steroidogenesis.