Literature DB >> 31610822

Reducing the level of nutrition of twin-bearing ewes during mid to late pregnancy produces leaner prime lambs at slaughter.

M I Knight1, K L Butler1, L L Slocombe1, N P Linden1, M C Raeside1, V F Burnett1, A J Ball2, M B McDonagh3, R Behrendt1.   

Abstract

The Australian prime lamb industry is seeking to improve lean meat yield (LMY) as a means to increasing efficiency and profitability across the whole value chain. The LMY of prime lambs is affected by genetics and on-farm nutrition from birth to slaughter and is the total muscle weight relative to the total carcass weight. Under the production conditions of south eastern Australia, many ewe flocks experience a moderate reduction in nutrition in mid to late pregnancy due to a decrease in pasture availability and quality. Correcting nutritional deficits throughout gestation requires the feeding of supplements. This enables the pregnant ewe to meet condition score (CS) targets at lambing. However, limited resources on farm often mean it is difficult to effectively manage nutritional supplementation of the pregnant ewe flock. The impact of reduced ewe nutrition in mid to late pregnancy on the body composition of finishing lambs and subsequent carcass composition remains unknown. This study investigated the effect of moderately reducing ewe nutrition in mid to late gestation on the body composition of finishing lambs and carcass composition at slaughter on a commercial scale. Multiple born lambs to CS2.5 target ewes were lighter at birth and weaning, had lower feedlot entry and exit weights with lower pre-slaughter and carcass weights compared with CS3.0 and CS3.5 target ewes. These lambs also had significantly lower eye muscle and fat depth when measured by ultrasound prior to slaughter and carcass subcutaneous fat depth measured 110 mm from the spine along the 12th rib (GR 12th) and at the C-site (C-fat). Although carcasses were ~5% lighter, results showed that male progeny born to ewes with reduced nutrition from day 50 gestation to a target CS2.5 at lambing had a higher percentage of lean tissue mass as measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry and a lower percentage of fat during finishing and at slaughter, with the multiple born progeny from CS3.0 and CS3.5 target ewes being similar. These data suggest lambs produced from multiple bearing ewes that have had a moderate reduction in nutrition during pregnancy are less mature. This effect was also independent of lamb finishing system. The 5% reduction in carcass weight observed in this study would have commercially relevant consequences for prime lamb producers, despite a small gain in LMY.

Entities:  

Keywords:  body composition; condition score; gestational nutrition; saleable meat yield; sheep

Year:  2019        PMID: 31610822     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731119002271

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  2 in total

1.  Expression quantitative trait loci in sheep liver and muscle contribute to variations in meat traits.

Authors:  Zehu Yuan; Bolormaa Sunduimijid; Ruidong Xiang; Ralph Behrendt; Matthew I Knight; Brett A Mason; Coralie M Reich; Claire Prowse-Wilkins; Christy J Vander Jagt; Amanda J Chamberlain; Iona M MacLeod; Fadi Li; Xiangpeng Yue; Hans D Daetwyler
Journal:  Genet Sel Evol       Date:  2021-01-18       Impact factor: 4.297

2.  Effects of mid-gestational l-citrulline supplementation to twin-bearing ewes on umbilical blood flow, placental development, and lamb production traits.

Authors:  Michelle L Kott; Stefania Pancini; Savannah L Speckhart; Lauren N Kimble; Robin R White; Jamie L Stewart; Sally E Johnson; Alan D Ealy
Journal:  Transl Anim Sci       Date:  2021-06-09
  2 in total

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