Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T05:03:29.212Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Observations on the follicle population of Blackface Sheep

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

Marca Burns
Affiliation:
Wool Industries Research Association, Headingley, Leeds

Extract

The follicle population of the Blackface breed (‘double-coated’) was followed in skin samples taken from four lambs at eight intervals between 3 days and 43 weeks of age. The follicle population differs greatly from that of the Romney and Leicester breeds previously studied (Burns, 1949).

1. At 1 month old the secondary/primary follicle ratio (S/P) was slightly lower than the Leicester and much lower than the Romney, and the difference became accentuated with age.

2. Fewer secondary follicles are developed after birth than in the Leicester or Romney, although the period during which they can be developed is longer, extending at least to 12 and possibly to 17 weeks after birth.

3. The follicle density is less than half that of the Leicester, but the difference in S/P ratio is not sufficiently large to account for this, which is mainly due to the Blackface having a much lower density of primary follicles at birth.

4. The possibility is suggested that the secondary follicles arise as a result of ‘induction’ by ‘follicle organizer’ coming from primary follicles in a quantity which decreases with advancing age. It may be that when the primary density is high the areas affected by organizer from each primary overlap, providing sufficient organizer to permit of numerous secondary follicles developing at a late post-natal stage, as reported in the Merino.

5. The Blackface contrast with the other breeds in that its primary follicles are conspicuously larger than its largest secondary follicles. All primary fibres are medullated except when about to shed, but many secondary fibres are free of medulla. Kemps are produced only by primary follicles, some of which however produce long ‘hair’ fibres.

6. Many fibres which grow strongly medullated fibres during summer change to the production of non-medullated fibres in winter. The shedding of the kemps in spring should probably be looked upon as physiologically an autumn moult, since the fibres cease growth and produce ‘brushes’ during the autumn.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1953

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Burns, M. (1949). J. Agric. Sci. 39, 64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, H. B. (1943). Bull. Coun. Sci. Industr. Res. Aust. no. 164.Google Scholar
Carter, H. B. & Hardy, M. H. (1947). Bull. Coun. Sci. Industr. Res. Aust. no. 215.Google Scholar
Deshpande, A. K. (Forthcoming.)Google Scholar
Dry, F. W. (1933). N. Z. J. Agric. 46, 10.Google Scholar
Wildman, A. B. (1937). Nature, Lond., 139, 891.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wildman, A. B. (1953). Microscopy of Natural Textile Fibres. W.I.R.A. Publication (forthcoming).Google Scholar