Title of article
Pregnancy does not affect commercial milk yield in dairy ewes managed to lamb at 9-month intervals
Author/Authors
A.D. Morrissey، نويسنده , , A.W.N. Cameron، نويسنده , , A.J. Tilbrook، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
4
From page
211
To page
214
Abstract
Dairy sheep are not usually milked when they are pregnant and it is not known if pregnancy reduces either milk yield or
the persistency of lactation. To test this hypothesis, East Friesian crossbred ewes were ranked according to milk yield and ewes
producing≥1000 mL/d at day 90 of machine milking were allocated into two groups, one of whichwas mated (n = 91) while the other
group was not (n = 102). Pregnancy was diagnosed 40 d later. Milk volumes were recorded fortnightly until production fell below
500 mL/d or until the experiment was discontinued after 184 d of machine milking. Daily milk yield declined during the last 90 d
of lactation (P≤0.001) and differences between treatments were observed at days 157, 173 and 184 of machine milking (P < 0.05).
Pregnancy affected daily milk yield as early as day 67 of pregnancy, increases the rate of decline in milk yield (12.9±0.6 mL/d vs.
9.0±0.5 mL/d, P≤0.001), and reduces the number of days (172±2.9 d vs. 181±2.6 d, P = 0.022) ewes are milked by machine.
Pregnancy did not result in significant losses of commercial milk yield (246±7 L vs. 259±7L, P = 0.193).
© 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords
pregnancy , lactation , dairy ewes , East Friesian
Journal title
Small Ruminant Research
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Small Ruminant Research
Record number
847732
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