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The development and structure of, and seasonal change in, the coat of some Wiltshire sheep
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
Summary
Coat and skin samples were taken monthly from three Wiltshire ewes for two years, and then fortnightly between the spring equinox and the autumn equinox of 1968.
The fleece comprised kemp and wool, having a weight of 1·1 kg and a length of 50 mm. In summer all the primary fibres had a latticed medulla, and although the secondaries were smaller than the primaries, they were relatively coarse and often medullated, over one-third having a latticed medulla at the peak period. The overall mean S/P ratio was 3·5.
Follicle development was studied in four lambs from birth to 84 days. Only 27% of the secondaries lacked fibres at birth, and all had fibres at 14 days. There was a trend of increasing medullation in the primary fibres. Shedding primary follicles were seen from birth onwards, and shedding secondaries from 28 days, although obvious casting of the birth coat did not begin until 84 days (at the beginning of June).
There was a basic seasonal cycle of follicle activity starting in March and lasting until September; inactivity began in September, reached 100%, and continued at this level until March. Subsidiary cycles suspected from the monthly samples were confirmed by the fortnightly samples. Thus peaks of inactivity in June and August separated three cycles of growth of two months duration. Only 80% of the primaries and 50% of the secondaries became inactive in June, with 50% of the primaries and 30% of the secondaries, in August.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1969
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