Reproductive performance in the Sheep CRC Information Nucleus using artificial insemination across different sheep-production environments in southern Australia

Title
Reproductive performance in the Sheep CRC Information Nucleus using artificial insemination across different sheep-production environments in southern Australia
Publication Date
2014
Author(s)
Geenty, Ken
Brien, F D
Harden, S
Hocking-Edwards, J E
Hart, K
Van Der Werf, Julius H
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2512-1696
Email: jvanderw@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:jvanderw
Hinch, Geoffrey
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4731-865X
Email: ghinch@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:ghinch
Dobos, Robin C
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9110-6729
Email: rdobos2@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:rdobos2
Refshauge, G
McCaskill, M
Ball, Alexander
Behrendt, R
Gore, Klint
Savage, Darryl
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Place of publication
Australia
DOI
10.1071/AN11323
UNE publication id
une:15287
Abstract
The present paper covers reproductive performance in an artificial-insemination (AI) program of the Sheep CRC Information Nucleus with 24 699 lambs born at eight locations in southern Australia across five lambings between 2007 and 2011. Results from AI with frozen semen compared well with industry standards for natural mating. Conception rates averaged 72%, and 1.45 lambs were born per ewe pregnant for Merino ewes and 1.67 for crossbreds. Lamb deaths averaged 21% for Merino ewes and 15% for crossbreds and 19%, 22% and 20% for lambs from ewes that were mated to terminal, Merino and maternal sire types, respectively. Net reproductive rates were 82% for Merino ewes and 102% for crossbreds. From 3198 necropsies across 4 years, dystocia and starvation-mismothering accounted for 72% of lamb deaths within 5 days of lambing. Major risk factors for lamb mortality were birth type (single, twin or higher order), birth weight and dam breed. Losses were higher for twin and triplet lambs than for singles and there was greater mortality at relatively lighter and heavier birth weights. We conclude that reproductive rate in this AI program compared favourably with natural mating. Lamb birth weight for optimum survival was in the 4-8-kg range. Crossbred ewes had greater reproductive efficiency than did Merinos.
Link
Citation
Animal Production Science, 54(6), p. 715-726
ISSN
1836-5787
1836-0939
Start page
715
End page
726

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