Seasonal reproduction in ewes selected on seasonal changes in wool growth
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Reproduction
- Vol. 79 (1), 207-213
- https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0790207
Abstract
Romney and Perendale ewes were selected on the amplitude of seasonal wool growth. The ewes were fed a constant plane of nutrition and run with vasectomized rams. Ovarian activity was recorded by laparoscopy during 11 months. Ewes with a low amplitude of seasonal wool growth (Group L) had a 68% higher wool growth rate in winter and a 17% lower wool growth rate in summer compared with ewes with a high amplitude (Group H). There was no difference between the groups in the date of the first mating mark. Ewes in Group L entered anoestrus significantly later than did ewes in Group H; the difference was 11 days in the mean date of the last mating mark and 17 days in the mean date of the last ovulation. A significantly higher proportion of ewes in Group L ovulated during July to November. In addition, ewes in Group L had a significantly higher proportion of multiple ovulations throughout the experiment: on average the difference between the groups was 0.21. These results show that phenotypic selection for a low amplitude of seasonal wool growth resulted in a delay in the end of the breeding season associated with an increase in ovulation rate, suggesting independent effects on the beginning and end of the breeding season.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of constant-release implants of melatonin on seasonal cycles in reproduction, prolactin secretion and moulting in ramsReproduction, 1985
- Changes in pulsatile LH secretion after ovariectomy in Ile-de-France ewes in two seasonsReproduction, 1985
- Central effects of photoperiod on reproduction in the ram revealed by the use of a testosterone clampJournal of Endocrinology, 1984
- Seasonal changes in LH and prolactin concentrations in ewes of two breedsReproduction, 1983
- Reproductive performance of commercial sheep flocks in South Island districtsNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1982
- Photoperiodic Control of Thyroid Function and Wool and Horn Growth in Rams and the Effect of Cranial SympathectomyEndocrinology, 1980
- Seasonal variation in oestrus and ovarian activity of Finnish Landrace, Tasmanian Merino and Scottish Blackface ewesAnimal Science, 1977
- A note on the effect of changes in daylength on the seasonal wool growth cycle in Soay sheepAnimal Science, 1976
- The effect of light-dark sequences on wool growthThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1961
- Studies on the breeding season and reproduction of the ewe Part I. The breeding season in different environments Part II. The breeding season in one localityThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1952