Ewe and lamb behaviour in traditional Border Leicesters, Glen Vale Border Leicesters of the NSW Agriculture and Fisheries, Glen Vale x Border Leicester crosses and medium-fine-wool Merinos, all running in paddocks of 3-4.5 ha, were compared in spring 1983 at Glen Innes, N.S.W. Twenty-eight aspects of behaviour with a known or reputed influence on lamb survival, especially of multiples, were examined in undisturbed and contrived situations. The Glen Vales and their crosses were superior to the Border Leicesters and Merinos in behaviour and lamb survival, particularly behaviour concerned with the ability of ewes to keep their lambs together. The study indicates that contrived twin-care tests could form the basis of a selection program to improve maternal care and survival of multiples.
Resistance to body cooling and rate of recovery from induced hypothermia were measured in 287 single, newborn Merino lambs from 24 different sire families, using a water bath test in which partly immersed lambs were progressively cooled. Birth weight, birthcoat type (fine-hairy) and skin thickness were recorded at the time of test. There was an unexpected occurrence of congenital goitre, the incidence and severity of which was estimated by manual palpation of the thyroid gland. Heritability (� s.e.) of cold resistance (CR), estimated by paternal half-sib analysis, was 0.70 � 0.25. Sex of lamb, type of weather, time of test, Fecundin treatment and age of ewe were fitted in the model as fixed effects but none were significant. Other heritable traits (h2 � s.e.) included birthweight (0.50 � 0.22), birthcoat grade (0.61 � 0.24), coat depth (0.62 � 0.24), skin thickness (0.35 � 0.19) and the severity of goitre (0.21 � 0.16). Significant genetic correlations (r �s.e.) between cold resistance and other traits were: birthweight, +0.76 � 0.18; birthcoat grade, +0.56 � 0.24; birthcoat depth, +0.56 � 0.24; skin thickness, +0.51 � 0.27; goitre, -0.58 � 0.40. Most of the corresponding phenotypic correlations were small. Goitre did not affect CR significantly, despite the genetic correlation between them. Heritability of CR, further adjusted for the effects of birthweight, birthcoat grade and depth, and skin thickness as covariates, was 0.55 � 0.23. About 40% of the variation in CR was accounted for by fitting fixed effects and covariates, but significant sire effects remained. Rate of recovery from hypothermia was not heritable and it was unrelated to any other variable except goitre, which tended to be associated with slower recovery (rp = 0.18). It was concluded that genetic selection for increased CR would succeed but would promote birthcoat hairiness unless a corrective selection index was used. The relationship between birthcoat type and CR was considered to be mediated by genes affecting both coat type and CR, not primarily by a direct effect of coat insulation.
This paper reports on birth-site distribution of Merinos and some British breeds in 34 lambing paddocks in a major study over 5 lambing seasons at Armidale New South Wales, and in minor studies during single lambing seasons, 2 in New South Wales and 3 in the United Kingdom. The observed distribution of birth-sites is related to topographic and other environmental features of the paddocks. In level, or nearly level paddocks, Merinos tended to lamb in a random pattern, but in sloping paddocks their birth-sites were consistently aggregated in the areas of greatest elevation. British breeds (Suffolks and Cheviots in New South Wales, and Welsh Mountain, Scottish Blackface, North Country Cheviots and Greyface in the United Kingdom) showed a pronounced tendency to lamb near the margins of paddocks, and a less marked preference for an elevated site. It is suggested that lamb mortality could be significantly reduced by the use of paddocks that provide shelter at preferred elevated positions, or along and within the paddock margins.
Behavioural factors associated with lamb mortality were examined in regard to the relative effects of age and parity in single-bearing Merino ewes. Primiparas tended to have longer labour and higher lamb mortality than multiparous ewes. Maternal behaviour in primiparas was characterised by more desertions, a smaller proportion that stood and started to groom their lambs immediately after birth, and a larger proportion with non-cooperative behaviour during the initial sucking attempts of the lamb. These traits, and a high incidence of malpresentations, were particularly marked in 5-year-old primiparas deliberately denied access to rams in previous seasons. There was no evidence of improved maternal behavioural attributes associated with increasing age of ewe that were independent of previous experience in giving birth and rearing lambs.
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