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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The effects of heat stress on the development of the foetal lamb

PS Hopkins, CJ Nolan and PM Pepper

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 31(4) 763 - 771
Published: 1980

Abstract

Environmental heat stress in tropical sheep suppressed lamb birth weight, but the animals which did not experience hyperthermia under natural environmental conditions gave birth to significantly heavicr (P<0.01) lambs than their less adapted counterparts. Climate chamber studies designed to simulate the rectal temperature patterns of tropical sheep demonstrated that, without nutritional intervention, heat stress during the last month of pregnancy significantly retarded foetal growth (birth weight 2.3 kg v. 3.4 kg; P< 0.01) and maturation of wool follicles (P< 0.01). By comparison, severe nutritional restrictions during the last 3 months of pregnancy also caused a significant reduction in lamb birth weight (3.2 kg v. 3.9 kg; P<O.01), but this difference was not so marked.

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9800763

© CSIRO 1980

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