The production and short chain fatty acid composition of lipid from cashmere goat buck fleece
GC Hillbrick and DJ Tucker
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
47(4) 553 - 558
Published: 1996
Abstract
This study examined the lipid content and short chain fatty acid composition of fleece samples collected from Cashmere goat (Capra hircus laniger) bucks at various times throughout the year. Fleece samples from does and gonadectomised goats were also analysed at one time during the breeding season for comparison. Lipid was extracted with chloroform/methanol azeotrope, saponified, and analysed for short chain fatty acids (C2-Clo) by gas chromatography and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Bucks had increased amounts of lipid and ethyl-branched fatty acids in fleece samples shorn from March to September, compared with fleece samples shorn in November and January. The increases in the amounts of lipid and ethyl-branched fatty acids corresponded with the breeding season and the period when the buck odour was increased. This supports the assumption that ethyl-branched fatty acids may be a pheromone in goats.Keywords: Capra hircus laniger; cashmere buck; pheromone
https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9960553
© CSIRO 1996