Performance of Hair Breeds and Prolific Wool Breeds of Sheep in Southern Illinois, United States of America


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Three prolific wool-breeds (Finnsheep, Combo-6 and Booroola Merino) and 2 hair-breeds (St. Croix and Barbados) were evaluated. Suffolk and Targhee ewes were exposed to rams (3 rams per breed per year) of these 5 breeds. Results indicated that ewes mated to hair-breed rams had higher fertility and their lambs had higher survival to weaning than ewes mated to wool-breed rams, suggesting a better reproductive performance of ewes mated to hair-breed rams. F$sb1$ ewe lambs resulting from the previous matings were mated to Dorset rams. F$sb1$ ewe lambs from hair-breed sires reached puberty later, were lighter at breeding and had a shorter breeding to lambing interval than F$sb1$ ewe lambs from wool-breed sires. Hair-breed-sired F$sb1$ ewe lambs had higher fertility, less lambs born per ewe lambing and weaned more of lamb per ewe lamb exposed than F$sb1$ ewe lambs sired by wool-breed rams suggesting a superior adaptability of the hair-breeds over the wool-breeds to the environment in southern Illinois. These F$sb1$ ewe lambs were also mated to Dorset rams when they were 1$sp{1/2}$ and 2$sp{1/2}$ years old. F$sb1$ ewes from hair-breed sires were lighter at breeding, ovulated less and conceived to a ram earlier than F$sb1$ ewes from wool-breed sires. Adult F$sb1$ ewes from hair-breed sires had higher fertility, higher ewe productivity and their lambs had higher survival and weighed less at weaning than those from wool-breed sires. These results together with those from Suffolk and Targhee ewes and F$sb1$ ewe lambs suggest that the productivity of ewes mated to or sired by hair-breed rams is superior to that of ewes mated to or sired by wool-breed rams.







Changes in the Sheep Industry in the United States


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The U.S. sheep industry is complex, multifaceted, and rooted in history and tradition. The dominant feature of sheep production in the United States, and, thus, the focus of much producer and policy concern, has been the steady decline in sheep and lamb inventories since the mid-1940s. Although often described as "an industry in decline," this report concludes that a better description of the current U.S. sheep industry is "an industry in transition."







Annual Scientific Report


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Hair Sheep Of Western Africa And The Americas


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Perhaps less than 10 percent of the world's sheep have hair coats instead of wool fleeces, but as an animal resource, these sheep are important far out of proportion to their numbers. Hair coats provide an advantage in the face of the heat, humidity, and other stresses of the tropics. Small in body size, early to mature, and often highly prolific,










Hair Sheep Research


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