Abstract
Monthly coat and skin samples were taken from three goats for one year in Australia, and from six others for two years in Scotland. The coat appeared to have a simple cycle of active growth in summer followed by inactivity in winter.The kemp fibres of the outer coat formed brush ends at about the time of the autumn equinox and remained dormant until late spring. Follicles developed first in the foetus formed a brush first. No moult was obvious because new kemps grew before all the old ones had shed, the only manifestation of shedding being a shortening of the coat. The old wool tended to be lost before growth of the new, so that wool was completely lacking in the coat during summer.Observations on skin sections showed that the majority of both kemp (primary) and under-wool (secondary) follicles become active immediately after the longest day, although there was a tendency for re-growth of wool fibres to be delayed, particularly in females.Whereas the proportion of kemps with brush ends during winter reached 100%, the proportion among wool fibres was as low as 50%. A complete explanation for this is not yet evident. The bad winter of 1963 apparently caused a greater proportion of secondaries to form brush-ends earlier and to remain inactive longer.Details are given of some of the histological features of brush formation.