Literature DB >> 21533615

Merits of the fat-tailed Barbarine sheep raised in different production systems in Tunisia: digestive, productive and reproductive characteristics.

Hichem Ben Salem1, Narjess Lassoued, Mourad Rekik.   

Abstract

Barbarine sheep is the dominant breed in Tunisia. This fat-tailed breed present in all production systems is characterised by metabolic and digestive adaptation to the contrasting environment conditions prevailing in the country (heat stress, water deprivation, salinity etc.). The fat tail (1.5 to 7 kg) is an energy reservoir that is used in periods of feed scarcity. Moreover, the rumen of this breed harbours a microflora enabling it to valorize low-quality roughages and native range vegetation. Barbarine sheep could make benefit from a wide range of local feed resources like fodder shrubs (e.g. cactus and oldman saltbushes), tannin-containing shrubs (e.g. Acacia cyanophylla) and agro-industrial by-products (e.g. olive cake, bran etc. conserved in the form of feed blocks or pellets). It has a very shallow anoestrous, the intensity of which is dependant upon nutrition conditions rather than day length as temperate breeds. Productive and reproductive performances of late pregnant-early suckling, pre-mating ewes and also rams of this breed are not affected when some alternative feed resources replace common feedstuffs which are expensive and cannot afford regularly to smallholders. In brief, the merits of the Barbarine sheep in the production systems and other main adaptive mechanisms of this breed are discussed in this paper. The prospective of Barbarine sheep husbandry in the system dynamics, climate change and the evolution of the socioeconomic context are also envisaged.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21533615     DOI: 10.1007/s11250-011-9863-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod        ISSN: 0049-4747            Impact factor:   1.559


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Authors:  N Lassoued; G Khaldi; Y Cognié; P Chemineau; J Thimonier
Journal:  Reprod Nutr Dev       Date:  1995
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4.  Genome variation in tick infestation and cryptic divergence in Tunisian indigenous sheep.

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Review 5.  'Can They Take the Heat?'-The Egyptian Climate and Its Effects on Livestock.

Authors:  Amira A Goma; Clive J C Phillips
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 3.231

6.  Molecular detection and phylogenetic analyses of Toxoplasma gondii from naturally infected sheep in Northern and Central Tunisia.

Authors:  Mariem Rouatbi; Yosra Amdouni; Safa Amairia; Mohamed R Rjeibi; Said Sammoudi; Mourad Rekik; Mohamed Gharbi
Journal:  Vet Med Sci       Date:  2016-12-20

7.  Tick Infestation and Piroplasm Infection in Barbarine and Queue Fine de l'Ouest Autochthonous Sheep Breeds in Tunisia, North Africa.

Authors:  Médiha Khamassi Khbou; Mariem Rouatbi; Rihab Romdhane; Limam Sassi; Mohamed Jdidi; Aynalem Haile; Mourad Rekik; Mohamed Gharbi
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  7 in total

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