Pretreatment of zona-free Chinese hamster (CH) oocytes with three kinds of lectin – concanavalin A (Con-A), phytohaemagglutinin-P (PHA) and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) – was attempted in order to improve penetration by golden hamster (GH) spermatozoa in vitro. Con-A had no significant effect on penetration at 2 μg/ml, adequately facilitated oocyte-sperm fusion at 4 μg/ml, and caused excessive sperm binding and resultant severe polyspermy at 10 μg/ml. Neither PHA nor WGA had positive effects on sperm penetration at any concentrations (2–10 μg/ml) examined. Using the Con-A (4 μg/ml)pretreatment, high rates of interspecific fertilisation and subsequent chromosome analysis of hybrid 1-cell zygotes were achieved. Among 258 CH oocytes used, 212 (82.2%) were fertilised and 153 (72.2% of fertilised ova) developed to the first cleavage metaphase. Eventually, 132 CH-derived chromosome complements and 153 GH-derived ones were successfully karyoanalysed. Incidences of aneuploidy and structural anomaly were 3.1% and 2.3% in CH complements, and 1.4% and 6.5% in GH complements, respectively. These incidences were not significantly different from those obtained by intraspecific in vivo fertilisation, suggesting that our interspecific in vitro fertilisation system does not cause chromosome aberrations.