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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Maintaining Ewe Bodyweight For A Late Mating, T Marshall
Maintaining Ewe Bodyweight For A Late Mating, T Marshall
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE experiments have indicated that the bodyweight of ewes at mating can have a large bearing on lambing performance.
It appears that for every 10 lb. increase in pre-mating bodyweight, an increase of some 3 to 6 per cent, lambs born could be expected, depending on the lambing time.
Later Mating Improves Lambing Results, R J. Suiter
Later Mating Improves Lambing Results, R J. Suiter
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Ovulation studies in Western Australia have indicated that increased lambing percentages in crossbred and Merino ewes could be expected from mating in February-April rather than December- January.
Such increases have been demonstrated in time of lambing trials with crossbred ewes, but had not been seen in Merino flocks until recently.
This report summarises the results of time of lambing trials with Merinos carried out at the Merredin and Wongan Hills Research Stations between 1963 and 1969.
High Pre-Mating Liveweights Improve The Lambing Performance Of Merino Ewes, R J. Suiter
High Pre-Mating Liveweights Improve The Lambing Performance Of Merino Ewes, R J. Suiter
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Analysis of lambing trials with Merino ewes has shown a highly significant association between pre-mating liveweight and lambing performance.
With May-June lambing ewes there was a 2.9 per cent, lambing increase for every extra 10 lb. liveweight; for July-August- September lambing ewes there was a 6.9 per cent, increase for every 10 lb. liveweight increase.
With the May-June lambing there was a critical weight below which twinning was negligible.
Mating Weaners Does Not Affect Future Ewe Performance, R J. Suiter, K. P. Croker
Mating Weaners Does Not Affect Future Ewe Performance, R J. Suiter, K. P. Croker
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Maiden ewes in Western Australia are usually mated in their second year because of supposed ill-effects of earlier mating on the ewe's future production. Mating at a younger age however, providing there was no reduction in future performance, would provide for an extra lamb drop and thus increase the lifetime output of ewes.
Information from various sources indicated that weaners could be successfully mated providing their bodyweights were satisfactory. This trial was carried out to test the results of mating weaners under Western Australian conditions.
Dogs, Tapeworms, Cysts : And Soiled Sheep, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Dogs, Tapeworms, Cysts : And Soiled Sheep, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
To protect our export markets it is necessary to meet the required standards and to eliminate as far as possible any sources of cysts, contamination, blemished carcasses or other defects in meat.
Some of these things are beyond the control of the individual farmer, but there are some things he can do to help ensure that the sheep he sends to abattoirs are free of defects which threaten export markets.
Inoculation Abscesses Can Downgrade Carcasses, M R. Gardiner
Inoculation Abscesses Can Downgrade Carcasses, M R. Gardiner
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THE presence of inoculation abscesses in meat is one of the lesser known causes of downgrading or rejection of carcasses, but these abscesses have caused increasing concern in recent years.
They have obvious importance in export carcasses.
A Control Programme For Cheesy Gland In Sheep, M R. Gardiner
A Control Programme For Cheesy Gland In Sheep, M R. Gardiner
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
CASEOUS LYMPHADENITIS, or "cheesy gland" as it is usually known in Australia, is a common disease of sheep which is very important in the economics of the lamb and mutton industry.
Observations On The Mating Behaviour Of Rams, K P. Croker, D. R. Lindsay
Observations On The Mating Behaviour Of Rams, K P. Croker, D. R. Lindsay
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
TO work efficiently in commercial flocks, rams must mate with and fertilise relatively large numbers of ewes, often over short periods of mating.
The importance of mating behaviour is obvious. Despite this, little is known of the mating behaviour of rams under commercial situations.
A series of experiments in 1968 at Badgingarra Research Station was designed to investigate this and other aspects of mating behaviour.
Causes Of Low Lambing Percentages, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Causes Of Low Lambing Percentages, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
West Australian Merino flocks average about 70 per cent, lambs marked each year. Reasons for this low percentage are that as many as 30 per cent, of ewes do not lamb, twinning rates are low and from 10 to 25 per cent, of lambs born die.
Among the research projects by the Department of Agriculture's Sheep and Wool Branch have been a number directed at the various stages of reproduction in the ewe. These have given some important leads on the causes of low lambing percentages.
If you have marked less than 60 per cent, lambs in the past several …
Recommendations For Management Of Flocks During Joining, K P. Croker
Recommendations For Management Of Flocks During Joining, K P. Croker
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THE age or experience of the ram, the number of ewes it has to serve and the management of the ram and ewe flock at mating time all influence the lamb-marking percentage.
These are the findings of a systematic research programme conducted over the period 1963 to 1955 by Dr. R. J. Lightfoot,* in collaboration with Mr. J. A. C. Smithf (1966) and continued by the author in the years 1967 to 1969.
Urea Or Grain Supplements For Stubble?, H E. Fels
Urea Or Grain Supplements For Stubble?, H E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Three methods of supplementing sheep grazing stubble were compared at Merredin Research Station in 1970. The stubble used in the experiment was left after harvesting a nine-bushel crop of Gamenya wheat which was a weed-free second crop on new land. The land had never been sown to legumes.
Sheep : Experimental Basis For Urea Feeding Recommendations, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Sheep : Experimental Basis For Urea Feeding Recommendations, Department Of Agriculture, Western Australia
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Recent scientific reviews have concluded that in spite of the great number of experimental observations recorded throughout the world there is no evidence yet to prove that urea can be used profitably for sheep on low quality roughages in genuine grazing conditions.
An experiment is in progress at Merredin Research Station this season, especially designed to demonstrate a response to urea by sheep grazing wheat stubbles, if such a response is possible.
Surplus Cereal Crops For Sheep Feed, H E. Fels
Surplus Cereal Crops For Sheep Feed, H E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
SINCE the introduction of wheat quotas many farmers have considered feeding unsaleable grain to sheep.
The three alternative methods of feeding this grain to sheep are
• as standing crops
• as grain supplements, fed in the paddock
• as grain plus hay, in a feedlot.
Crop Rationing : A Useful Drought Feeding Technique, H E. Fels
Crop Rationing : A Useful Drought Feeding Technique, H E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
A TRIAL carried out during the 1969 drought demonstrated that rationing standing crop is a practical method of feeding it to sheep when feed is scarce.
Rationing will be mainly a drought feeding technique for that part of the crop which will definitely be used as sheep feed. Crop that may or may not be needed for sheep would normally be harvested and the grain kept as a contingency allowance.
Urea Block Supplements For Stubble, H E. Fels, R. J. Parkin
Urea Block Supplements For Stubble, H E. Fels, R. J. Parkin
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THERE was a great deal of controversy throughout the summer of Western Australia's 1969-70 drought over the feeding of supplements other than grain to grazing sheep.
This report summarises some of the experiments carried out by this Department to investigate various artificial means of supplementing sheep grazing stubbles and dry summer pastures.
Further details of the experiments can be obtained by contacting the authors.
The results failed to demonstrate economic responses to urea supplements for grazing sheep.
Urea Mixture Formulations, H E. Fels
Urea Mixture Formulations, H E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
This experiment was done once the experiment above (Urea or Grain Supplements for Stubble) had shown definite but uneconomic responses to a particular mixture of urea, molasses and minerals. The aim was to find whether the response depended on the content of various portions of the mixture, and whether the response to the "shotgun" lick could be explained by the presence of salt, sulphate or cobalt.
Experiments With Urea On Private Farms, R J. Parkin, G. Palmer, A. Haagensen, L. D. White, R. J. Suiter, H. E. Fels
Experiments With Urea On Private Farms, R J. Parkin, G. Palmer, A. Haagensen, L. D. White, R. J. Suiter, H. E. Fels
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
Many District Advisers have carried out trials on private farms to test the response to a variety of types of supplementary feeds. This report gives brief details of five such experiments carried out with urea supplements over the last five years. Table 1 summarises the details and results of these trials.
Look After The Tail Enders, B R. Beetson
Look After The Tail Enders, B R. Beetson
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
IN Department of Agriculture drought feeding trials last summer, shy feeders lost weight and died while the bigger sheep grew fat. When drafted off and fed separately the shy feeders ate their share and survived the summer.
Choosing Your Lambing Time, T Marshall
Choosing Your Lambing Time, T Marshall
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
SHEEP, pastures and labour are the major resources of the sheep enterprise but their productivity is greatly affected by the timing of operations associated with them.
This article discusses how the lambing time can be chosen to get maximum use from each resource.