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Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Crossbred lamb growth and carcase characteristics of some Australian sheep breeds

PP Cotterill and EM Roberts

Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 19(99) 407 - 413
Published: 1979

Abstract

A breed comparison involving 31 2 crossbred progeny of three breeds of sire (Poll Dorset, Suffolk, and Lincoln) and five breeds of dam (Dorset Horn x Merino, Border Leicester x Merino, South Australian Merino, and Peppin Merino) was made between 1973 and 1975 in the western Riverina of New South Wales. The lambs were fed a post-weaning feedlot ration at one of two levels and were slaughtered when they reached 35 kg liveweight. Characters measured were: pre-weaning and postweaning growth rate, dressing percentage, carcase length, carcase leg length, kidney + pelvic fat weight, eye muscle length and depth, rib fat depth, and leg + loin fat and muscle percentage. Carcase characters were adjusted to a constant carcase weight. Important breed differences were those associated with rib fat depth and growth rate. The Suffolk- BL x M cross had high pre-weaning and post-weaning growth rates, but BL x M dams produced lambs with greater rib fat depths. The Suffolk-DH x M and Suffolk-DR x M crosses represented the best compromise between rib fat depth and growth, but their post-weaning growth rates were substantially less than the Suffolk-BL x M. These breed differences for rib fat depth and growth rate were not dependent on the level of post-weaning nutrition.

https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9790407

© CSIRO 1979

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