Title of article :
Evaluation of lamb performance and costs in motherless rearing of German Grey Heath sheep under field conditions using automatic feeding systems
Author/Authors :
D. Bimczok، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
11
From page :
255
To page :
265
Abstract :
Performance and costs were evaluated for 205 German Grey Heath lambs reared artificially under field conditions using three feeding and three weaning regimes. In phase 1 (pre-weaning), ad libitum feeding of milk replacer (MR) on an automatic lamb feeder was compared to restricted MR feeding on the modified calf feeder “Stand alone II®” or with buckets. In phase 2 (after weaning at 12 kg body weight), abrupt weaning was compared to gradual weaning systems with reduction of the amount or the concentration of MR over 2 weeks. In phase 1, average daily gains (ADG) were highest in the Ad libitum group (0.262±0.032 kg/d), followed by Bucket and Stand alone with 0.227±0.036 kg/d and 0.209±0.023 kg/d, respectively (P < 0.05). In contrast, feed conversion rate was best for group Stand alone (1.17:1), compared to 1.20:1 in group Bucket and 1.23:1 in group Ad libitum. In phase 2, abrupt weaning caused weight loss in lambs from the Ad libitum and Bucket groups, but not in group Stand alone. No post-weaning growth check was seen in lambs weaned gradually. In general, differences in body weight (BW) between groups were low, and on d 70, no significant difference was seen between feeding groups, whereas lambs weaned abruptly still had lower BW than lambs weaned by reducing the amount of MR (P < 0.05). Total lamb mortality was 3.9%, with no accumulation of infectious disease in any of the feeding or weaning groups. Economic analysis revealed that total costs in phase 1 were highest for group Stand alone (57–70 D per lamb), followed by the Bucket group (63 D per lamb). Although MR consumption was higher in the Ad libitum group, this method was the most cost-efficient (50–54 D per lamb), because purchase price of the feeder and labor costs were relatively low. In phase 2, gradual weaning systems added costs of4.70–9.50 D per lamb. Our findings indicate that the most efficient way to rear 60–120 lambs artificially under field conditions is by using an automatic ad libitum lamb feeder followed by abrupt weaning. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Feeding behavior , Costs , Automatic feeder , Lambs , Artificial rearing
Journal title :
Small Ruminant Research
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Small Ruminant Research
Record number :
847136
Link To Document :
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