Pattern of intake of three roughage diets by non-pregnant, non-lactating Scottish Blackface ewes over a long period and the effects of previous nutritional history on current intake
- 1 April 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Science
- Vol. 26 (2) , 203-215
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003356100039623
Abstract
The voluntary intake of two hays and one dried grass by 48 mature non-pregnant Blackface ewes was measured for 33 weeks. The apparent dry-matter digestibility coefficients of the diets in vitro were 59, 61 and 77% respectively for the hays and the dried grass. At the end of the first phase of the experiment each group of 16 ewes was split into two subgroups of five animals, each of which was subsequently given one of the other diets, and one subgroup of six animals which remained on the same diet. Food intake was measured for a further 8 weeks. Body fat was estimated at intervals from tritiated water space.The amount of variation in voluntary food intake that could be attributed to variation in live weight and fatness of the animals and in apparent dry-matter digestibility and cell wall constituents of the diet was calculated for various periods.The range of live weight and fatness increased during the experiment. Initially, and after the change in diets, variation in apparent dry-matter digestibility had an important positive effect on intake, but at the end of the 33-week phase its influence was negligible or, when fat weight was not considered, negative. The negative effect of fat weight on intake increased during the experiment.Within individual diets during short periods of time (1 to 5 weeks) the highest proportions of the variation in intake that could be attributed to variation in live weight and fatness of the ewes were 50, 94 and 65% respectively for the hays and the dried grass. Taking all three diets together all the variables considered could explain 75% of the variation for a few weeks at a time, but for longer periods seasonal influences, and other factors not included among the independent variables, probably operated.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interrelationships between physical and metabolic control of voluntary food intake in fattening, pregnant and lactating mature sheep: a modelAnimal Science, 1977
- Long- and short-term effects on intake of pelleting a roughage for sheepAnimal Science, 1974
- A note on the effect of body condition on the voluntary intake of dried grass wafers by Scottish Blackface ewesAnimal Science, 1972
- Subjective assessment of body fat in live sheepThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1969
- Relation between metabolizable and digestible energy in sheep and cattleAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1969
- The influence of body weight (fatness) on the energic efficiency of adult sheepAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1969
- Effect of Time of Year on the Roughage Intake of Housed SheepNature, 1964
- The effect of daily photoperiod on the wool growth of Merino rams subjected to unrestricted and restricted feeding regimesAustralian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 1964
- The regulation of food intake by sheepAnimal Science, 1961
- Variation in feed intake as a cause of variation in wool production of grazing sheepAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1960