A group often female and five male Finnish Landrace sheep were taken to Scotland in 1962. In subsequent purebreeding for four years they and their offspring have shown average litter sizes (at birth) of 2·0, 3·0 and 3·4 for ewes aged one, two and three or more years respectively.Body weights of breeding ewes prior to mating were on average 72, 106 and 128 lb for ewes of the three age groups.Mean ewe fleece weights were 4·5 lb with the wide range of 1·7 to 7·1 lb due in part to some shedding of fleece wool in spring. The quality of the true wool in the undercoat was estimated at 54–56's.
SUMMARY1. For ten years purebred Blackface and Swaledale ewes have been kept on a small hill grazing together with first crosses and backcrosses to the Swaledale. The total flock of about 120 ewes was mated and lambed on sown pastures where ewes with twins remained from lambing until weaning. Four new rams (two of each breed) were used each year.2. It is concluded that the Swaledales produced fewer lambs than the other ewes, but these were of greater birth weight (5 %) and cannon bone length (2 %); moreoever, they were better mothers than Blackface (4 %) when rearing singles on hill grazing but not if rearing twins on sown grass.3. Blackface sheep showed greater weights at weaning (5%), at mating (5%), and of fleece (15%) than did pure Swaledales.4. First cross sheep were equal to or slightly superior to the parental mean in birth weight, weaning weight and cannon-bone length. They exceeded the better parent in ewe weight, first fleece weight, and weight of weaned lambs.5. Backcross sheep although not always statistically distinguishable from Swaledale in cannon-bone length and fleece weight or from first cross sheep in reproductive characters tend to confirm the interpretations placed on the relations between the purebred and first cross sheep.6. Heterosis estimated as a superiority of first cross sheep over the mean of the two parental breeds varied from 0% for cannon-bone length to 9·5% for prolificacy of 4-year-old ewes.
1. A comparison lasting 3 years has been made of 5 types of crossbred ewes produced by mating Border Leicester, Clun Forest, Dorset Horn, Finnish Landrace and Tasmanian Merino rams to Scottish Blackface ewes. Data from a total of 576 ewe years became available.2. In body weight at mating time when they were 7, 19 or 31 months old, the Border Leicester and Dorset Horn crossbred ewes were heaviest, followed by Cluns. Finnish and Merino crossbreds were about 15–20% lighter than the Border Leicester crossbreds.3. In fleece weight, Finnish crossbreds were lower by about 1·0—1·5 lb relative to Border Leicester crossbreds.4. In fertility, Finnish crossbreds were highest with 1·5, 2·0 and 2·3 lambs born per ewe lambing at ages 1, 2 and 3 years respectively. The corresponding averages for the combined Border Leicester, Clun and Dorset Horn crossbreds were 1·1, 1·6 and 1·6 and for Merino crossbreds 1·0, 1·1 and 1·2. Numbers weaned were similarly ranked.5. Lambs out of crossbred ewes showed a sequence of group differences in weight at birth and at weaning corresponding to those shown by their mothers at mating time. The heaviest lambs were produced by Dorset Horn and Border Leicester crossbreds, and the lightest by Merino crossbreds. As a percentage of ewe weight at mating, lamb weight at weaning was highest for the Finnish group.6. In terms of litter weight at weaning, fitted values for the Merino group were the lowest while those for the Finnish group were the highest. The other three groups gave similar and intermediate values.
SUMMARYIn order to obtain a wide range of live weights, two Oxford Down, two Southdown, and two Soay rams of recent feral origin, were used to sire lambs from 169 crossbred ewes. These ewes had been bred from Blackface ewes mated to Border Leicester, Dorset Hora, Clun Forest, Finnish Landrace and Tasmanian Merino rams. Of the 282 lambs weaned by the crossbred ewes, 61 were singles, 166 twins, 51 triplets and 4 quadruplets. Carcass data were obtained from all but three of them.Oxford Down cross lambs were, in terms of fitted values, 10 kg heavier and 4 days younger than Soay cross lambs and 6 kg heavier and 2 days younger than Southdown cross lambs when slaughtered. Twins and triplets were 1·4 and 2·1 kg, respectively, lighter than singles and were 37 and 58 days older than singles. Ewes of the heaviest groups produced heavier lambs in a shorter time than ewes of the lightest groups.The Soay cross lambs showed a higher killing-out percentage, less tail fat, and more kidney fat, than the Southdown and Oxford Down cross lambs.Carcass characters made little if any difference to the price paid for the lambs which depended mainly on weight. Receipts from lambs were highest when the most fertile ewes were mated to the largest rams.
The effect of the time of mating on ewe fertility and subsequent lamb growth was examined in Clun sheep in Scotland. The flock of 249 females was divided into six mating groups, the first was put to a fertile ram on 12 October 1962, the remainder being added at twoweekly intervals. There was a marked decline in the average number of lambs born per female lambing as the time of mating moved from October to December (b = -0-007 per female per day). Other components of fertility were not affected. The mean birth weight was slightly greater in the later mating groups; however, by the time the lambs were 9 weeks of age, the trend was reversed, the regression of 9-week weight on day of mating being -0-063 lb per day.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.