2004
DOI: 10.1051/animres:2004012
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Performance of the fat-tailed Barbarine sheep in its environment: adaptive capacity to alternation of underfeeding and re-feeding periods. A review

Abstract: -The Barbarine sheep is characterised by a fat-tail, whose mass varies between 1 and 4 kg. Its management is traditionally based on spring mating. The ability of this fat-tailed ewe to mobilise its body reserves has been demonstrated in lactation and the dry period by experimentally varying the food supply. The severely underfed ewe (200 g oat hay) can survive 161 days and lose 36% of its body weight (BW), with a change of 8.8 kg of dissected adipose tissue (AT) and 3.4 kg of muscle. It reached this stage with… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…For these ewes, progestagen priming allowed expression of oestrus at the induced ovulation; a similar result has been reported for the Barbarine breed by Lassoued and Khaldi (1990) with a synchronous oestrous expression between day 0 and day 4 after introduction of rams. For both breeds, absence of differences between experimental groups lends support to the conclusions of Atti, Bocquier and Khaldi (2004) that local Tunisian breeds thriving in harsh environments conserve a very high ability to reproduce despite broad changes in feeding provision and body condition.…”
Section: Oestrous Responsesupporting
confidence: 67%
“…For these ewes, progestagen priming allowed expression of oestrus at the induced ovulation; a similar result has been reported for the Barbarine breed by Lassoued and Khaldi (1990) with a synchronous oestrous expression between day 0 and day 4 after introduction of rams. For both breeds, absence of differences between experimental groups lends support to the conclusions of Atti, Bocquier and Khaldi (2004) that local Tunisian breeds thriving in harsh environments conserve a very high ability to reproduce despite broad changes in feeding provision and body condition.…”
Section: Oestrous Responsesupporting
confidence: 67%
“…Therefore, as a paradoxical effect, it seems that for livestock systems in which reproduction periods are not well controlled and where the physiological stages of the animals are widespread, the adaptive capacity of the herd considered as a whole may be greater than that of a cohort of individuals with a narrow range of nutritional requirements. Such a strategy is often adopted in DCs (sheep: Atti et al, 2004;cattle: Ezanno et al, 2003).…”
Section: Effects Of Feeding Practices In Producing Animalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Synchronising nutritional requirements within a herd is a risky practice when the production factors are not very well-controlled (feed in particular) and when animals may be placed in a situation of adaptive disruption during their production cycle. So it seems that, for livestock systems in which reproduction periods are not well controlled and the physiological stages of the animals are dispersed, the adaptive capacity of the herd considered as a whole may be greater than that of a cohort of individuals with a narrow range of nutritional requirements [5].…”
Section: Disruptive Situations: the Limits Of Biological Regulation Smentioning
confidence: 99%