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The concentration of minerals in the blood of genetically diverse groups of sheep: I. Copper concentration at different seasons in Blackface, Cheviot, Welsh Mountain and crossbred sheep at pasture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

Gerald Wiener
Affiliation:
A.R.C. Animal Breeding Research Organization, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, 9
A. C. Field
Affiliation:
Moredun Research Institute, Gilmerton, Edinburgh, 9
Jean Wood
Affiliation:
A.R.C. Unit of Statistics, Edinburgh, 8

Summary

The concentration of copper in the blood of more than 300 sheep of a grassland flock was determined on each of five occasions between May 1965 and June 1966. Six breed classes, Scottish Blackface, Cheviot and Welsh Mountain, and the three crosses among these breeds, were involved.

Breeds differed significantly in blood copper concentration with the Blackface having consistently the lowest and the Welsh the highest values. Crossbred sheep showed marked heterosis. Their levels were mostly at or near to the concentration of the parental breed with the higher value. Within breeds there was a positive regression of blood copper level on live weight of ewe.

Ewes which had produced lambs affected by swayback in 1964 had lower levels of copper in their blood than ewes which had produced normal lambs. The difference was significant and most marked in winter.

Ewes which were barren had, subsequently, higher blood copper concentrations than ewes with lambs. Ewes with single lambs had on average slightly higher levels than those with twins (but not significantly so), however, the effect differed among the breeds. Blood copper levels differed significantly on most occasions with the week in which ewes lambed in relation to the date of bleeding. Age of ewe had significant effects on copper concentration only at one bleeding (January 1966).

There was an indication that classes low in copper concentration, notably Blackfaces and mothers of swayback lambs, showed a relatively steeper decline in copper levels during the winter than did other sheep.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

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