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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The effects of inbreeding, maternal handicap, and range in age on 10 fleece and body characteristics in Merino rams and ewes

J Lax and GH Brown

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 18(4) 689 - 706
Published: 1967

Abstract

Estimates have been made of the influence on 10 fleece and body characteristics of dam's phenotype, range in age of offspring, inbreeding of offspring and dam, type of birth of offspring, and age of dam. The data came from rams 10–11 months old and ewes 15–16 months old, which had previously been shorn as weaners; the animals belong to an unselected control flock run at Cunnamulla, south-western Queensland.

The dam's phenotype showed a high positive relationship with that of her offspring in all 10 characteristics, the values of the regression coefficients confirming the levels of heritability previously estimated on the same flock but without removing all the effects included in the present analysis.

Younger animals in a group had lower greasy and clean wool weights and body weights, even at 15–16 months, but the effects were slight, except for body weight.

For each 1% increase in the offspring's own level of inbreeding, the regression coefficients for rams and ewes respectively were -0.042 and –0,051 lb for greasy wool weight, –0.025 and –0.025 1b for clean wool weight, and –0.431 and –0.541 1b for body weight. These figures represent a decrease of 5–10% in clean wool weight and 8–10% in body weight for the progeny of half-sib matings.

Inbreeding of the dam had a negligible effect on the characteristics examined.

Animals born in multiple births in this environment suffer penalties which were still evident up to 15–16 months of age, resulting in both sexes in lower wool and body weights, lower wrinkle scores, fewer fibres per unit skin area, and fewer crimps per inch of staple. Fibre diameter was slightly higher for the multiple birth animals, but Çhe signs for the effects on other characteristics differed between sexes. The handicaps for rams and ewes respectively were 9 and 5% for clean wool weight and 7 and 5% for body weight.

Dams were separated into four age groups (2, 3, 4–7, and 8–10 years). Greasy and clean wool weights and wrinkle score rose for offspring of both sexes to a peak at 4–7-year-old dams, then fell slightly. Body weight reached a peak at 3 years for rams and 4–7 years for ewes, while fibre diameter and staple length reached a peak at 3 years for ewes and 4–7 years for rams. In no case was the fall for the older dam age groups sufficient to invalidate the usual practice of adjusting only the progeny of 2-year-old dams. Other characteristics showed no consistent pattern.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9670689

© CSIRO 1967

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