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Reproductive performance of New Zealand Romney sheep grazed on red clover (Trifolium pratense) pastures
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2009
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The reproductive performance of 253 female Romney sheep of different ages has been studied from 1958 to 1960. Comparisons of the reproductive performance were made between ewes grazed on red clover pastures and ewes grazed on perennial rye-grass and white clover swards. The red clovers were oestrogenic during all periods of utilization.
The ingestion of oestrogenic red clovers caused the ewe lambs to accept the male before the start of the normal breeding season. No corpus luteum was found in the ovary of these lambs thus induced into oestrus. The subsequent reproductive performance of these ewe lambs at 2 years of age was not affected. The oestrus per se or the regularity of oestrus of the young (1½-year-old) or the aged (5½-year-old) ewes was not affected by the diet of oestrogenic red clover.
The ingestion of oestrogenic red clover did not affect the reproductive performance of the young ewes at 2 years of age, but did cause a protracted lambing season and a reduced level of lambing performance in the aged ewes at 6 years of age. No endometrial cyst was found in the aged ewes. It was suggested that the reduced level of reproductive performance of the aged ewes could have resulted from an unfavourable environment within the ewe, for the process of fertilization or implantation of the fertilized ova during the breeding season.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1961
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