The effect of protein intake during gestation on ewe and lamb performance
- 1 February 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Science
- Vol. 10 (3) , 297-309
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003356100026301
Abstract
Two experiments were carried out in which a total of sixty-four Border Leicester × Scottish Blackface ewes were each individually fed on one of eight experimental diets from six weeks after service to parturition. The eight diets supplied four intakes of crude protein (156, 119, 90 and 65 g/68-kg ewe per day) and two intakes of energy (2923 and 2468 kcal ME/68-kg ewe per day). After parturition the ewes received one of two lactation treatments supplying a standard protein intake of approximately 260 g/68-kg ewe per day at ME intakes of 4700 and 4186 kcal/68-kg ewe per day.The relationship between net body weight change (Y, kg) and ME (X1) and DCP (X2) intakes (per 68-kg ewe) was described by the equation Y = The DCP intake corresponding to maximum efficiency of energy utilization was 98 g/68-kg ewe per day. The relationship between lamb birth weight (Y, kg) and ME and DCP intake was described by the equation Y = 0·0003X1 + 0·0080 X2 + 2·8501.Ewe live-weight loss during early lactation, lamb growth rates from birth to three weeks and ewe milk yield at three weeks tended to decrease with decreasing protein intake during pregnancy.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of the protein requirements of the mature breeding eweBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1967
- The effect of source and level of dietary protein on the performance of in-lamb ewesAnimal Science, 1967
- The effect of different levels of nutrition during late pregnancy on the subsequent milk production of Blackface ewes and on the growth of their lambsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1967
- The heat of combustion of the urine of sheep and cattle in relation to its chemical composition and to dietBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1966
- Prediction of the amount of methane produced by ruminantsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1965
- Studies on the carbohydrate metabolism of sheep. XVII. Feed requirements and voluntary feed intake in late pregnancy, with particular reference to prevention of hypoglycaemia and hyperketonaemia.Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1962
- Fat lamb studies in Victoria. II. The interaction between pre- and post-natal planes of nutrition on the production of wool and lambs by crossbred sheepAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1957
- Plane of nutrition and starch equivalentsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1955
- Lamb Production as Affected by Level of Protein in the Ration of the Mature Ewe1Journal of Animal Science, 1952
- Milk-secretion studies with New Zealand Romney ewes. Parts I and IIThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1949