Abstract :
Lambs were subjected to odors of two monoterpenes (camphor and -pinene) that decreased intake in a previous study to
determine if exposure during feeding modified their effects on subsequent intake. In two experiments, 36 ewe lambs were
group-fed alfalfa pellets in enclosed portable buildings each morning for 56 d (phase 1). Camphor (25 g, Experiment 1) or
-pinene (50 ml, Experiment 2) was placed in feeders in a mesh-covered container immediately before feeding. In phase 2,
lambs were individually fed alfalfa pellets for 20 min each morning for 10 d (5-d adaptation, 5-d collection). Treatments were
sprayed on alfalfa pellets at levels representing the concentration of that chemical in tarbush (Flourensia cernua) or at 10-fold
that concentration. No day by treatment interactions were detected for intake during adaptation or collection periods for either
chemical (P > 0.05); therefore, data were pooled across day. Exposure to the volatile aroma for 56 d had no effect on intake during
the subsequent 10-d interval for either monoterpene (P > 0.05). Moreover, intake during the collection period was not affected
by treatment concentration (P > 0.05). Neither concentration of the terpene applied to alfalfa pellets nor previous exposure to
the volatile aroma of camphor or -pinene altered feed intake under the conditions of this study.
© 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Herbivory , intake , monoterpenes , olfaction , sheep