Effects of nutrition and paring on linear hoof growth in sheep

1990 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 197
Author(s):  
JL Wheeler ◽  
HI Davies ◽  
DA Hedges ◽  
PJ Reis

Paring increased the linear hoof growth on the forefeet of Merino wethers by an average of 4.1% (P < 0.05) with a tendency for paring to promote faster growth on the medial digits. Effects of feeding these sheep with 400, 600, or 1000 g pelleted ration day-1 were assessed in a 4 X 4 Latin square design with 28-day periods using four measures of response. An extra (fifth) period was used to determine residual effects. The proportion of residual (carryover) to direct effect was much smaller for hoof growth than for wool. Hoof growth was not related to wool production. In another experiment, hoof growth rate of sheep increased from 103 to 136 8m day-1 when the intake of digestible dry matter was increased from 400 to 600 g day-1 (P< 0.001), and from 115 to 125 8m day -1 (P> 0.05) when the intake of digestible nitrogen was increased from 12 to 25 g day-1. Hoof growth rates of Merino wethers grazing native or sown pasture were not significantly affected by injecting DL-methionine daily into the abomasum. Hoof growth is not an appropriate index of wool growth. It may provide an easily measured, rapidly responsive and cumulative measure of nutritional changes, but its use cannot be recommended until more information is available on the factors that affect it and their interaction with ambient temperature.

1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (79) ◽  
pp. 189 ◽  
Author(s):  
TH Brown

Liveweight, seasonal wool growth rates, annual wool production, wool quality and hand feeding requirements were recorded for Merino wethers when autumn deferred or continuously grazed. The two management systems were compared at a series of eight stocking rates from 12.4 to 29.7 sheep per hectare for five years from 1967 to 1971 at the Kybybolite Research Centre, South Australia. Autumn deferment resulted in increased liveweight and wool growth rate during the months of June to September. However, liveweights and wool production under either management were similar for the remainder of the year. Because deferred grazing did not increase liveweights during the critical autumn period, and since hand feeding requirements were similar under either management system at the higher stocking rates, it is suggested that yearly stocking rates can not be increased by autumn deferment. Apart from the drought year of 1967, the continuously grazed sheep required little or no hand feeding up to 22.2 wethers per hectare. It is unlikely that the cost of hand feeding deferred sheep up to this stocking rate would be covered by the small increase in wool production. However, this would depend on the cost of conserved fodder and price received for the wool.


1973 ◽  
Vol 13 (63) ◽  
pp. 351 ◽  
Author(s):  
IA Barger ◽  
WH Southcott ◽  
VJ Williams

Two experiments are reported. In experiment 1, light infections with the intestinal nematode Trichostrongylus colubriformis reduced wool growth of sheep by 42 per cent compared with pair-fed controls. There was no significant difference in wool growth between those sheep given a cystine supplement as an intraperitoneal pellet and those given a daily intra-duodenal injection of cystine, although cystine was poorly absorbed from the peritoneal cavity. In experiment 2, fifteen sheep were fed a maintenance ration and their wool growth rates defined. When six of the sheep were given a daily intra-duodenal drip containing 2 g cysteine hydrochloride, and six sheep were given the same drip intravenously, their wool growth rate increased by a mean of 33 per cent compared with the wool growth of the three untreated sheep, irrespective of the route of administration of the cysteine. Three sheep in each group of six were then lightly infected with Trichostrongylus colubriformis and the wool production of all sheep was measured in the presence and absence of the daily cysteine supplement via the two routes. The infection depressed wool growth, but did not influence the wool growth response to either route of cysteine supplementation. It was concluded that the reduced wool growth induced by trichostrongylosis could not be attributed to malabsorption of cysteine. Evidence was obtained that sheep resistant to Trichostrongylus colubriformis produced less wool when subjected to a larval challenge.


1973 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 939 ◽  
Author(s):  
SC Valentine ◽  
DC Brown

Formaldehyde-treated silage, formic acid-treated silage, formaldehyde-formic acid-treated silage, untreated silage, and lucerne hay were made from a lucerne sward and offered to Merino wethers. The formaldehyde was applied at a rate of 0.9 % of the weight of the dry matter and formic acid at 0.5 % of the fresh weight of the lucerne. Formaldehyde-treated silage and formaldehyde-formic acid-treated silage had significantly lower concentrations of ammonia nitrogen and total and individual organic acids than untreated silage. Formic acid-treated silage had a similar degree of fermentation to untreated silage, but more acetic acid and less lactic acid were produced than in untreated silage. However, when formic acid was applied in combination with formaldehyde, the ensiling fermentation was inhibited more than when formaldehyde was applied alone. There was some apparent protection of protein by the formaldehyde treatment. Treatment with formic acid significantly increased the in vivo digestibility of both nitrogen and dry matter, but did not increase ad libitum intake or wool growth by sheep offered this silage. Compared to untreated silage, treatment with formaldehyde significantly reduced the in vivo digestibility of nitrogen, produced a non-significant increase in intake, and significantly increased wool growth. The treatment of lucerne with both formaldehyde and formic acid significantly increased in vivo digestibility of dry matter, ad libitum intake, and wool growth compared with untreated silage. The treatment of lucerne with a mixture of formaldehyde (0.9% of the dry matter) and formic acid (0.5% of the fresh weight) was a suitable method of controlling the ensiling fermentation in order to increase the ad libitum intake of lucerne silage by sheep and their subsequent wool production. However, the intake and wool production of sheep offered such silage was still significantly less than that of sheep offered lucerne hay.


1988 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 173 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Cottle

Six groups, each comprising 10 superfine Merino wethers ('Sharlea'), were individually penned indoors and hand-fed oats and wheat straw, either alone or with 10% (w/w) crushed lupins or extruded lupins. The rations were fed at maintenance level and were offered 3 times a week. Half of the sheep were defaunated by drenching with Alkanate 3SL3. Wool growth rates and wool quality were measured during a 5-month trial period. Defaunation resulted in a 6.5% increase in clean wool production, with a 3% higher sulfur content. The quality of the wool grown was unaffected by defaunation. Inclusion of lupins or extruded lupins in the ration resulted in a 10% increase in clean wool growth. Wool quality was largely unaffected, though a lower resistance to compression was apparent. It was concluded that a reasonable diet for 'Sharlea' production was 500g oats, 50g wheat straw, 50g lupins, 10.5g vitamin, mineral mix per sheep per day. This diet may be further improved by additional ingredients and defaunation of the sheep.


1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (90) ◽  
pp. 58 ◽  
Author(s):  
RND Reid

Groups of Polwarth ewes which 1. were barren, 2, were pregnant but aborted with prostaglandins in early pregnancy, 3. lambed and reared a single lamb and 4. lambed but had their single lamb removed soon after birth, were used to estimate the effects of pregnancy and lactation on wool and Iiveweight. Pregnancy plus lactation reduced liveweight (17 per cent), wool growth rate (9 per cent) and clean fleece weight (11 per cent) ; pregnancy alone reduced liveweight (10 per cent), wool growth rate (7 per cent) and clean fleece weight (10 per cent) and its effects were greater than those of lactation in each of the characters studied.


1973 ◽  
Vol 13 (63) ◽  
pp. 360
Author(s):  
J Clark ◽  
JI Watts

Forty, Friesian x Jersey bull calves were fed diets comprising factorial combinations of milk, either whole (4.0 per cent fat) or skimmed (0.1 per cent fat) milk, fed at the rate of 4.5 kg day-1 until the calves were ten weeks old, with crushed barley at four levels from two to 18 weeks of age. The four levels of barley were 0, 25, 50 and 75 per cent of the dry matter intake of the calves. The calves had access to hay ad libitum throughout the experiment. The restricted quantities of skimmed milk fed to the calves did not support rapid gains in liveweight, even when supplemented with high levels of barley. The addition of barley to the diet of the calves reared on whole milk produced no response in terms of growth rate (0.54 kg day-1). However, the calves reared on skimmed milk had greater growth rates when their diet contained 25 per cent barley than with no barley, 0.36 kg day-1 and 0.28 kg day-1 respectively. Further additions of barley did not produce additional responses in growth rate.


2000 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melinda Thomas ◽  
Louise Hetherington ◽  
John W. Patrick

Developing seeds of four cultivars of Phaseolus vulgaris L., raised under glasshouse conditions, exhib-ited a 4-fold range in rates of storage product accumulation by their cotyledons. These growth rate differences were established during seed expansion. Patterns of dry matter distribution were consistent with absolute growth rates of cotyledons being an inherent property of developing seeds and not limited by photoassimilate supply. Seed surface areas and cotyledon volumes exhibited a 3.2-fold cultivar difference and were the principal components contribut-ing to cultivar variation in cotyledon absolute growth rates. The remaining cultivar variation was attributable to a 1.3- fold difference in dry matter fluxes, expressed on a seed surface area basis. Seed coats reflected these properties in terms of fluxes of dry matter released for cotyledon storage and surface areas supporting these fluxes. Seed coat surface areas correlated with estimates of total plasma membrane areas of ground parenchyma cells that are respon-sible for photoassimilate release. Cultivar differences in these membrane areas largely arose from variation in cell size. Coat turgor pressures correlated positively with dry matter fluxes imported into cotyledons. In contrast, sucrose concentration in bulk saps extracted from seed coats was identical across three cultivars but was positively related to growth rate in the remaining cultivar. Overall, these data suggested that cultivar dry matter fluxes were determined by variation in transport conductances for symplasmic movement through the post-sieve element pathway and for release across the plasma membranes of ground parenchyma cells. Comparable sucrose concentrations were found in seed apoplasmic saps across cultivars, and cultivar differences in absolute growth rates of in vitro cultured coty-ledons were retained. Together, these observations support the conclusion that cotyledons intrinsically express geno-typic variation in rates of dry matter transport comparable to those set independently by seed coats.


1975 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 337 ◽  
Author(s):  
PT Doyle ◽  
PR Bird

Dietary supplements of DL-methionine (0, 1.9, 3.8, 7.7 and 15.4 g per day) were given to five groups of 15-month-old Merino sheep (five per group) over an 8-week period. The roughage ration given (c. 840 g dry matter per day) comprised oaten chaff (78%), lucerne chaff (20%) and minerals (2%). Significant wool growth responses were obtained (18% above controls) when 3.8 g supplemental methionine per day was given. Changes in the rate of wool growth were paralleled by changes in nitrogen retention. Nitrogen retention was significantly increased above controls when 3.8 g supplemental methionine per day was given. Supplemental methionine did not affect liveweight gains.


1999 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 567-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. D. Johnston ◽  
R. W. J. Steen ◽  
D. J. Kilpatrick ◽  
D. E. Lowe ◽  
D. M. B. Chestnutt

AbstractA comparison was made over 2 years of sires of Suffolk and Dutch Texel breeds and ewes of Greyface (Border Leicester × Scottish Blackface), Suffolk Cheviot and Dutch Texel breeds in terms of food intake, prolificacy and lamb growth rates under a grass-based system of production. Suffolk Cheviot ewes consumed significantly more silage dry matter than the Greyface ewes in both years of the study. There was no overall difference between Greyface and Suffolk Cheviot ewes in terms of prolificacy. However lambs from Suffolk Cheviot ewes had a higher growth rate than lambs from Greyface ewes from birth to weaning in year 1 (P < 0·01). In the comparison of the three ewe breeds sired by Dutch Texel rams in year 2, Dutch Texel ewes produced a similar number of lambs to the other genotypes but had a higher incidence of difficult lambings, higher lamb mortality and consequently a lower number of lambs weaned. Purebred Dutch Texel male lambs had lower growth rates than crossbred Dutch Texel lambs (143 compared with 158 glday for lambs from Greyface ewes and 166 (s.e. 13.4) glday for lambs from Suffolk Cheviot ewes in year 1 and 183 compared with 251 and 248 respectively (s.e. 10.9) glday in year 2). Lambs sired by Suffolk rams had higher growth rates than those sired by Dutch Texel rams (252 compared with 224 (s.e. 5.4) glday) in year 2.


1995 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. N. Shem ◽  
E. R. Ørskov ◽  
A. E. Kimambo

AbstractAn experiment using twenty-five bulls aged between 1 and 1·5 years and weighing 117 to 209 kg was carried out to estimate voluntary dry-matter intake (DMI), digestible dry-matter intake (DDMI), dry-matter apparent digestibility (DMD) and growth rate when the bulls were given 18 foods available from smallholder dairy farms on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. The animals were randomly allocated to five groups of five animals each. Foods were then randomly allocated to the five groups for four periods of 60 days each during which DMI was measured. A digestion trial was made at the completion of each measurement. Outflow rates of solids from the rumen were determined by giving the animals 200 g Cr-mordanted fibre of each food and grab faecal samples were obtained. Dry matter (DM) degradation characteristics of the foods were determined in sacco in the rumen of three Boran steers fed on guatemala grass and the water soluble fraction (A) was measured. DMI varied from 2·2 kg for banana pseudostem to 4·77 kg/day for urea-treated maize stover. DMD ranged from 549 for untreated maize stover to 767 g/kg DM for banana pseudostem and growth rate ranged from 72 for banana leaves to 275 glday for urea-treated maize stover. Potential degradability (defined by A + B) (where B is the insoluble fraction degradable with time) for the DM ranged from 617 g for banana leaves to 874 g/kg DM for banana pseudostem and the degradation rate (c) ranged from 0·0168 for banana leaves to 0·0440 per h for green maize stover. The separate use of degradation characteristics A, B and c in multiple regression to predict DMI, DDMI, and growth rates gave better results than when A + B or (A + B) + c were used. Multiple correlation coefficients between degradation characteristics and DMI, DDMI and group rate were r– 0·90, 0·93 and 0·93 respectively. The results indicate that DMI, DDMI and growth rates by cattle fed on crop residues and forages could be predicted well using the rumen degradation characteristics of the foods.


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