Spring and summer and wool growth pasture feeding and ewe reproduction

Authors

  • K.F. Thompson
  • J.R. Sedcole
  • D. O'Connell
  • K.G. Geenty
  • A.R. Sykes

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.1990.52.1937

Abstract

Effects of pasture feeding level during lactation and over summer on ewe wool growth and ovulation rate were assessed in 1983-84 and 1984-85. Two levels of pasture feeding (lactation high and lactation low) from parturition to weaning (10 weeks) produced 8 to 10 kg liveweight difference in ewe liveweight at weaning. Groups (n = 40) were offered pasture allowances of 0.8, 1, 1.4, 2 or 5 kg DM/ewe/day from weaning until after the third synchronzied oestrus in April. Ewes on the lower allowances tended to reach a stable liveweight and those on 5 kg DM/ewe/day gained throughout. Other groups were offered low allowances during summer and then 5 kg DM/ewe/day after the first recorded oestrus. Mean dates for synchronised oestrus were 2 March, 19 March and 5 April. Ovulation rate increased by 0.15 corpora-lutea/ewe ovulating at each successive oestrus, and increased by 0.047 corpora lutes/ewe ovulating for each kg increase in liveweight at oestrus. These effects accounted for 77% of the variation in ovulation rate between treatments across years. The effects of flushing, lactation or summer liveweight change were small and generally non-significant. Lactation feeding affected wool growth during lactation as well and had carryover effects through the summer when lactation low ewes grew 10% less wool irrespective of the level of summer feeding. Keywords ewe, wool growth, ovulation rate, lactation, summer feeding, liveweight, flushing

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Published

1990-01-01

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Articles