A la mise à l'herbe et au cours des six premières semaines d'exploitation du premier cycle de la plante, nous avons observé les variations de la composition en acides gras majeurs des matières grasses du lait de vache et de la quantité de ces acides gras sécrétée par jour. Seize
SUMMARYNinety-three Kellakui fat-tailed single lambs were assigned after birth to a 2×2×2 factorial experiment; 46 were uncastrated males and 47 were females. About half the lambs of each sex were docked before they were 1 week old. Half the lambs had unrestricted milk from the ewes until 115 days of age (phase 1) and the other half received all the ewes' milk for the first 30 days and then about one-third of the milk until weaning at 60 days. Creep feed was avail-able to all lambs from about 3 weeks of age, in addition to 200 g of alfalfa dry matter per lamb daily. From 115 days of age, all lambs were fed on a standard fattening ration until slaughtered at weights of 46 to 49 kg for males and 35 to 38 kg for females (phase 2).Lambs given unrestricted milk were 7·4 kg heavier than restricted lambs at the end of phase 1. Significantly better gains due to docking were observed only for females during phase 2. There was little indication that docking affected feed conversion efficiency. In docked lambs the fat normally deposited in the tail was partially (less than 50%) relocated as subcutaneous plus intermuscular and internal fat. Lean meat percentages of carcasses were similar for docked and control treatments. There is a need to standardize reporting of results from docking experiments to make valid comparisons.
SUMMARYA total of 120, 6–7-month-old fat-tailed uncastrated Kellakui lambs were randomly allotted to three groups, given fattening diets for 93 days and then slaughtered. The diets contained 10 (A), 20 (B) or 30% (C) coarsely chopped wheat straw; the latter was increased at the expense of dried beet pulp. All diets contained 45% ground barley, 10% beet molasses and 1% ground oyster shells; there were minor adjustments in the cottonseed meal percentage to maintain a similar protein level in all diets.The three diets were also given in sequence to six adult male Kizil (fat-tailed) sheep in a digestibility trial. Further digestion trials were made with chopped wheat straw given alone or supplemented with 400, 800 and 1200 g of a concentrate consisting of 75% dried beet pulp and 25% cottonseed meal; an all-concentrate treatment was also included.Daily gain (g), feed efficiency (kg feed/kg gain) and dressing percentages for lambs given diets A, B and C were, respectively: 154, 9·78, 54·5; 159, 9·85, 53·5; 127, 11·30, 53·1. A significant decrease in daily gain occurred with the highest straw level and considerably more feed was required per unit of gain. Supplementing straw with 400 g of concentrate increased daily dry-matter intake per sheep from 645 g to 1214 g, with further but smaller increases at higher levels of supplementation. Almost linear increases were observed in dry-matter digestibility as more concentrate was given.
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