Author:
Hatcher S.,Hatcher S.,Lightfoot R. J.,Lightfoot R. J.,Purvis I. W.,Purvis I. W.
Abstract
The fleeces of Merino ewes suckled by Awassi,
Awassi × Merino or Merino lambs were analysed for the presence of
contaminant fibres (pigmented, urine-stained and kemp). Contaminant fibres
were transferred from the fleeces of all 3 lamb genotypes into the fleeces of
their dams, with direct body contact being the principle method of fibre
transfer. The pattern of the transfer between birth and weaning was highly
variable, although there was a general trend of increasing amount of transfer
with advancing lamb age, suggesting a continual cycle of transfer of fibres to
the dam’s fleece and subsequent loss from that fleece. Indeed, the
number of fibres transferred tended to decrease rapidly post-weaning, when the
source of the contaminant fibres (i.e. the lambs) was removed. Shearing of
Merino breeding ewes, regardless of the genotype of their lambs, (i.e. pure
Merino or crossbred), should be delayed until 4 weeks post-weaning in order to
reduce the number of contaminant fibres of lamb origin in their fleeces.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
3 articles.
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