Productive performance of Dorper sheep

The Dorper is a hardy South African composite breed, derived from a cross between the Black-headed Persian and the Dorset Horn. Dorpers are regarded as early-maturing, and ewes lambed at an age of 1 year in one study. Age at first lambing was higher in other literature sources cited. The fertility o...

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Main Authors: Cloete, S.W.P., Snyman, M.A., Herselman, M.J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66671
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author Cloete, S.W.P.
Snyman, M.A.
Herselman, M.J.
author_browse Cloete, S.W.P.
Herselman, M.J.
Snyman, M.A.
author_facet Cloete, S.W.P.
Snyman, M.A.
Herselman, M.J.
author_sort Cloete, S.W.P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Dorper is a hardy South African composite breed, derived from a cross between the Black-headed Persian and the Dorset Horn. Dorpers are regarded as early-maturing, and ewes lambed at an age of 1 year in one study. Age at first lambing was higher in other literature sources cited. The fertility of Dorper ewes was approximately 0.90 ewes that lambed per ewe mated, with a litter size ranging from 1.45 to 1.60. The gestation length of Dorper ewes was approximately 147 days, while they were reported to start cycling as soon as 52 days after parturition. The pre-weaning survival of Dorper lambs was cited at approximately 0.90. Overall reproduction rate of Dorpers ranged from 0.99 to 1.40 lambs weaned per ewe mated, while it exceeded 1.40 lambs weaned per ewe mated per annum under accelerated mating conditions. Dorper lambs gained from 0.24 to 0.28 kg per day under vastly different environmental conditions. When weaned early at 2–3 months of age, post-weaning gains in excess of 0.18–0.20 kg per day were recorded. At slaughter, Dorper lambs had dressing percentages of approximately 50%. Two divergent genotypes in the breed (with a hairy or a woolly fleece cover) were evaluated under natural pasture conditions. No conclusive advantage in favour of either genotype could be demonstrated as far as productive traits were concerned. It was concluded that the breed adapts well to a wide variety of environmental conditions. In view of the scarcity of estimates of genetic parameters for the breed, the maintenance and expansion of datasets suitable for this purpose should receive high priority.
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spelling CGSpace666712024-08-27T10:35:46Z Productive performance of Dorper sheep Cloete, S.W.P. Snyman, M.A. Herselman, M.J. sheep reproduction genetics growth genotypes The Dorper is a hardy South African composite breed, derived from a cross between the Black-headed Persian and the Dorset Horn. Dorpers are regarded as early-maturing, and ewes lambed at an age of 1 year in one study. Age at first lambing was higher in other literature sources cited. The fertility of Dorper ewes was approximately 0.90 ewes that lambed per ewe mated, with a litter size ranging from 1.45 to 1.60. The gestation length of Dorper ewes was approximately 147 days, while they were reported to start cycling as soon as 52 days after parturition. The pre-weaning survival of Dorper lambs was cited at approximately 0.90. Overall reproduction rate of Dorpers ranged from 0.99 to 1.40 lambs weaned per ewe mated, while it exceeded 1.40 lambs weaned per ewe mated per annum under accelerated mating conditions. Dorper lambs gained from 0.24 to 0.28 kg per day under vastly different environmental conditions. When weaned early at 2–3 months of age, post-weaning gains in excess of 0.18–0.20 kg per day were recorded. At slaughter, Dorper lambs had dressing percentages of approximately 50%. Two divergent genotypes in the breed (with a hairy or a woolly fleece cover) were evaluated under natural pasture conditions. No conclusive advantage in favour of either genotype could be demonstrated as far as productive traits were concerned. It was concluded that the breed adapts well to a wide variety of environmental conditions. In view of the scarcity of estimates of genetic parameters for the breed, the maintenance and expansion of datasets suitable for this purpose should receive high priority. 2000-05 2015-06-05T12:17:06Z 2015-06-05T12:17:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66671 en Limited Access Elsevier Cloetea,W.P, Snyman, M.A. and Herselmanb,M. J. 2000. Productive performance of Dorper sheep. Small Ruminant Reearch 35(2): 119-135.
spellingShingle sheep
reproduction
genetics
growth
genotypes
Cloete, S.W.P.
Snyman, M.A.
Herselman, M.J.
Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title_full Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title_fullStr Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title_full_unstemmed Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title_short Productive performance of Dorper sheep
title_sort productive performance of dorper sheep
topic sheep
reproduction
genetics
growth
genotypes
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66671
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