Author:
Hatcher S.,Hatcher S.,Lightfoot R. J.,Lightfoot R. J.,Purvis I. W.,Purvis I. W.
Abstract
The fleeces of Merino ewes mated by Awassi rams
were analysed for the presence of contaminant fibres (pigmented, urine-stained
and kemp). In a controlled shed mating, high numbers of contaminant fibres
were found in the fleeces of the ewes, with the number of fibres transferred
being proportional to the number of times the ram mounted the ewe. The number
of fibres transferred during the shed mating were substantially higher than
those found after paddock mating. In the latter instance, environmental
conditions and contact with other sheep would have contributed to the loss of
fibres from the recipients’fleeces. Each ram breed used in the paddock
mating experiment, Merino, Awassi and Suffolk, transferred fibres into the
fleeces of the mated ewes. The Suffolk transferred relatively more fibres than
both the Awassi or the Merino rams, in addition the fibres from the Suffolk
were significantly darker than those from the other breeds thus compounding
the severity of the contamination. Both mating experiments demonstrated that
the number of contaminant fibres remaining in the ewe’s fleece 8 weeks
after mating was not different to that existing in the fleece of the ewes
before mating. Therefore, in commercial flocks, the risk of contamination can
be minimised by shearing breeding ewes 8 weeks after rams have been removed
from the breeding flocks.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
4 articles.
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