Summary -Effect of photoperiod on milk yield, milk composition and voluntary food intake in lactating dairy ewes. Thirty-eight dairy ewes of the Sarda breed were divided in two groups which were equilibrated for zootechnical criteria. They were subjected to artificially controlled photoperiods of either long daylight (JL: 15h30 (-37.7%) over the same period. The milk solid concentration from the JL ewes (fig 4) was less than that of the JC ewes. The maximum differences, which occurred between days 30 to 40, were 14.2 g/litre for fat content and 11.0 g/litre for protein content. The rapid increase of daylength (exJC) was less favourable to milk solid concentration than its decrease (exJL) for both the fat content (-7.8 g/litre) and protein content (-6.5 g/litre). The levels of voluntary food intake (fig 1 which were identical at the end of pregnancy, started being different on day 25 of lactation. Between days 28 and 150 the mean total DM consumption for the JL ewes was 16.3% higher than those of the JC ewes. After the daylength change, the intake differences were reduced and became stabilised at a mean value of +6.2% for the exJL ewes. By the end of experiment, when the photoperiod had been the same for 30 days, the total food intake levels were very similar. Time
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.