An Embryo Transfer Study of Birth Weight in Finnish Landrace and Targee Sheep

Abstract
Sources of variation in Finnish Landrace and Targhee birth weights from pregnancies following natural matings and intra-breed, inter-breed and 2-breed embryo transfers were studied. Birth weights were recorded on 94 lambs from naturally mated ewes and 117 transfer lambs. Two analyses were done, one on observed weights, and one on deviations of observed weights from weights predicted from litter size and donor and recipient mature weights. The prediction equation removed effects of litter size on birth weight. Ewe lambs born following natural matings were lighter at birth than ram lambs; however, sex was not a significant source of variation in birth weights of lambs following embryo transfer. Targhee lambs born to Finn cross ewes were smaller (P<.05) than Targhee lambs born to Targhee ewes (4.5 vs 5.7 kg for singles and 3.0 vs 4.2 kg for twins). Finn lambs had similar birth weights whether born to Targhee ewes or Finn cross ewes. Birth weights of transferred Targhee lambs were related (P<.01) to donor ewe weight. Gestation length was a significant source of variation in observed birth weight in all groups except naturally mated Finns. Targhee lambs weighed more at birth than predicted on the basis of mature weight, either in naturally mated ewes, or following transfer to Targhee ewes. Finn lambs weighed less than predicted on the basis of mature size, regardless of recipient breed. These differences were reduced by adjustment for gestation period. Targhee lambs carried by Finn cross eweswere lighter at birth than predicted, and on average lighter than Finn lambs in the same pregnancy. Except for this one group (Targhee lambs from Finn cross ewes) four variables, i.e., litter size, mature weight of donor and recipient ewe and gestation length, accounted satisfactorily for the observed difference in lamb birth weights between the Targhee and Finn breeds. Copyright © 1979. American Society of Animal Science . Copyright 1979 by American Society of Animal Science.

This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: