Abstract :
Mid-pregnancy shearing has consistently been shown to increase lamb birth weight, which can lead to an increase in lamb
survival rates. However, shearing ewes during the winter months and under outdoor pastoral farming conditions can expose
the recently shorn ewe to a greater risk of hypothermia. The aim of this study was to determine if exposure of ewes to repeated
stressors, in mid- and late pregnancy, would result in an increase in lamb birth weight. This information may assist in the
elucidation of the mechanism for the birth weight response to mid-pregnancy shearing, which in turn could assist in the design
of management options to increase lamb birth weight without placing the ewe at risk. One hundred and forty-four twin-bearing
Romney ewes were allocated to one of six mid-pregnancy treatments: control, isolation on 2 or 10 occasions, sham-shearing on
10 occasions, intramuscular cortisol injection on 10 occasions or shearing. Isolation, sham-shearing and cortisol treatments were
conducted twice a week beginning, on average, day 74 of pregnancy and shearing occurred on day 76. During pregnancy, ewe
treatment had no effect on ewe live weight. However, average ewe body condition scores were higher in the shorn group than
in the sham-shorn or cortisol groups ( P,0.05). Intramuscular injections of cortisol had a greater effect on ewe plasma cortisol
concentrations than all other treatments ( P,0.05). Shearing produced a greater plasma cortisol response than isolation310
and sham-shearing ( P,0.05). Ewe plasma cortisol responses decreased during the 5 weeks of isolation and sham-shearing but
cortisol injections produced a greater response during the fifth treatment than the first or ninth treatments ( P,0.05). Lambs born
to shorn ewes were heavier and had a longer crown rump, forelimb and hind limb lengths than all other lambs ( P,0.05). In
addition, lambs born to ewes in the cortisol treatment were lighter than lambs born to control, isolation32, isolation310 and
shorn ewes ( P,0.05). The plasma cortisol concentrations observed for ewes injected with cortisol were far greater than those
observed in all other groups, which is likely to explain the low birth weights of lambs born to ewes in that group. These results
indicate that the mechanism by which mid-pregnancy shearing increases lamb birth weight is unlikely to be repeated stressors.
Keywords :
birth weight , Sheep , Pregnancy , stressors , Cortisol