Author:
Sherlock R. G.,Harris P. M.,Lee J.,Wickham G. A.,Woods J. L.,McCutcheon S. N.
Abstract
Sulfur amino acid supplementation increases wool production in sheep at low
planes of nutrition but it is unclear whether there is any benefit of
supplementation at planes of nutrition above maintenance and what implications
this might have for wool quality characteristics. This experiment directly
investigated the interaction between sulfur supplementation and plane of
nutrition in terms of wool growth and fibre characteristics. Twenty-four
Romney ewes, acclimatised in individual metabolism units over a 7-week
pre-treatment period, were allocated to 1 of 4 treatment groups based on a 22
factorial arrangement. Groups were low (L) or high (H) intake (0.8 or 1.3
maintenance, respectively) with continuous intravenous infusion of either
saline (–Cys) or cysteine (+Cys, 2 g/day). During the 3-month
treatment period, measurements were obtained for liveweight, plasma cysteine
concentration, wool sulfur concentration and output, clean wool growth, mean
fibre diameter (MFD), length growth rate (LGR), colour, loose wool bulk,
handle, and crimp frequency and character. Clean wool growth response
(P < 0.05) to cysteine supplementation was greater
for the L sheep (6.06 v. 4.31 g/100
cm2) than the H sheep (7.20 v.
6.13 g/100 cm2). The response to supplementation in
LGR (P < 0.01) was similar in both H (14%) and
L (20%) sheep. There was no response in MFD due to sulfur
supplementation, although fibre diameter measurements made along the fibres
suggest that there was a response in L but not H sheep
(P < 0.1).
Wool sulfur concentration and output increased as a result of cysteine
supplementation but concentration increased more in L (30.6
v. 24.5 mg S/g; P < 0.01)
than in H sheep (28.4 v. 26.2 mg S/g). Qualitative
electrophoresis analyses suggested that the increase in wool sulfur was
achieved primarily by an increase in ultra-high-sulfur proteins. Crimp
frequency and character were both significantly (P <
0.01) enhanced by cysteine supplementation.
It is concluded that cysteine supplementation, at feed intakes that commonly
occur in the commercial situation, can produce a useful increase in wool
growth. This growth increase is primarily accomplished by increasing length
growth rate rather than fibre diameter, which should also improve the value of
the wool fibre produced.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
11 articles.
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