A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems

Performance of Dorper sheep was compared to other breeds in pure and cross-breeding evaluations under different production systems. The number of ewes lambed per ewe joint (EL/ Ej) varied for the Dorper from 0.68 to 0.91 (average 0.81) and for other breeds and crosses from 0.65 to 0.91 (Average 0.82...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Schoeman, S.J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66701
_version_ 1855519531763499008
author Schoeman, S.J.
author_browse Schoeman, S.J.
author_facet Schoeman, S.J.
author_sort Schoeman, S.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Performance of Dorper sheep was compared to other breeds in pure and cross-breeding evaluations under different production systems. The number of ewes lambed per ewe joint (EL/ Ej) varied for the Dorper from 0.68 to 0.91 (average 0.81) and for other breeds and crosses from 0.65 to 0.91 (Average 0.82). Average litter size (LB/lambing) varied from 1.02 to 1.52 (average 1.28) and from 1.02 to 1.70 (average 1.30) for the two groups, respectively rates in Kenya were high (49%) among Dorper lambs compared to the local red Maasai breed. Owing to a high susceptibility to gastrointestinal parasites. Average weaning weight (WW) (100 days) were 12.4% heavier in the Dorper. Post-weaning mortality rates in Kenya were high (49%) among Dorper lambs compared to the local Red Maaisai breed, owing to a high susceptibility to gastrointestinal parasites. Average weaning weights (WW) (100days) were 12.4% heavier in the Dorper than in the breeds it was compared to, but 31.7% heavier than the woolled breeds. Total WW and efficiency of Dorper and Dorper crosses were higher than Merino, Afrino, Dohne merino, South African Mutton Merino, but lower than in Finnish Landrace composite lines. Both Dorper and Dorper cross-breeds reached target slaughter weight of approx. 40kg earlier than Merino, Afrino, Suffolk and Ile de France crosses. Average daily gain to slaughter was 44% higher in the Dorper than the average of the groups it was compared to. It is concluded that the Dorper was superior in reproductive and growth traits to woolled and other indigenous breeds. However, there is a lack of information on the performance of the Dorper in cross-breeding systems.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace66701
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace667012024-08-27T10:35:18Z A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems Schoeman, S.J. livestock sheep animal breeding breeds crossbreeding growth reproduction Performance of Dorper sheep was compared to other breeds in pure and cross-breeding evaluations under different production systems. The number of ewes lambed per ewe joint (EL/ Ej) varied for the Dorper from 0.68 to 0.91 (average 0.81) and for other breeds and crosses from 0.65 to 0.91 (Average 0.82). Average litter size (LB/lambing) varied from 1.02 to 1.52 (average 1.28) and from 1.02 to 1.70 (average 1.30) for the two groups, respectively rates in Kenya were high (49%) among Dorper lambs compared to the local red Maasai breed. Owing to a high susceptibility to gastrointestinal parasites. Average weaning weight (WW) (100 days) were 12.4% heavier in the Dorper. Post-weaning mortality rates in Kenya were high (49%) among Dorper lambs compared to the local Red Maaisai breed, owing to a high susceptibility to gastrointestinal parasites. Average weaning weights (WW) (100days) were 12.4% heavier in the Dorper than in the breeds it was compared to, but 31.7% heavier than the woolled breeds. Total WW and efficiency of Dorper and Dorper crosses were higher than Merino, Afrino, Dohne merino, South African Mutton Merino, but lower than in Finnish Landrace composite lines. Both Dorper and Dorper cross-breeds reached target slaughter weight of approx. 40kg earlier than Merino, Afrino, Suffolk and Ile de France crosses. Average daily gain to slaughter was 44% higher in the Dorper than the average of the groups it was compared to. It is concluded that the Dorper was superior in reproductive and growth traits to woolled and other indigenous breeds. However, there is a lack of information on the performance of the Dorper in cross-breeding systems. 2000-05 2015-06-05T12:17:15Z 2015-06-05T12:17:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66701 en Limited Access Elsevier Schoeman, S.J. 2000. A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems. Small Ruminant Research 36: 137 - 146.
spellingShingle livestock
sheep
animal breeding
breeds
crossbreeding
growth
reproduction
Schoeman, S.J.
A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title_full A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title_fullStr A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title_full_unstemmed A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title_short A Comparative assessment of Dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
title_sort comparative assessment of dorper sheep in different production environments and systems
topic livestock
sheep
animal breeding
breeds
crossbreeding
growth
reproduction
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66701
work_keys_str_mv AT schoemansj acomparativeassessmentofdorpersheepindifferentproductionenvironmentsandsystems
AT schoemansj comparativeassessmentofdorpersheepindifferentproductionenvironmentsandsystems