Author:
Waters C. M.,Coelli K. A.,Lee G. J.,Atkins K. D.
Abstract
This study sought to confirm the long-term consequences of current and
previous reproductive cycles on liveweight, body condition and wool growth
over the lifetime of Merino ewes (2–6 years of age). Liveweights and
body condition scores at 4 stages of the reproductive cycle, and annual fleece
weights (greasy and clean), fibre diameter and yield were analysed to
determine the effects of the previous and current reproductive performance
(birth-type or rearing-type categories) using records from about 3300 Merino
ewes collected between 1977 and 1989.
The major effect of current reproduction on liveweight and wool production was
associated with fertility, although both birth and rearing types also
contributed. Ewes that lambed in the current year weighed 5.2 kg less at
weaning and grew 0.4 kg less clean wool annually than dry ewes, while ewes
that reared a lamb to weaning weighed 4.3 kg less than ewes that lost their
lamb(s). The effects on condition score followed those of liveweight.
The effects of previous reproduction on liveweights and condition scores were
large and, although diminishing with time, lasted for at least 10 months,
whereas any effects on annual fleece weight and mean fibre diameter were
small.
The results suggest that many ewes may enter the next reproductive year before
recovering from the reduction in either liveweight or body condition
associated with the previous reproductive cycle. Since Merino ewes are
required to produce both wool and replacement sheep, the changes in a
ewe’s production capacity associated with reproduction are important to
Merino wool production enterprises as their profitability may be influenced.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献