Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 7

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 7
COLOUR INHERITANCE IN ICELANDIC SHEEP 5 by law, be housed from the beginning of November, as the ewes may start coming on heat during the first or second week of November. The beeding season usually starts from 15th—30th of December, varying somewhat from one part of the country to another. 3. Detection of ewes on heat Because correct information about par- entage is of vital importance in connec- tion with inheritance studies, a detailed description of the practices followed dur- ing the breeding season seems justified. During the breeding season, the most common practice is to take an entire teaser ram to the shed where the ewes are kept. This ram is led by a rope, tied around the base of the liorns on horned rams, but around the neck on polled rams. The ram is allowed to run into the ewe pen ahead of the man who leads him, and care is then taken that the ram only de- tects ewes on heat without serving them. The ewes on heat are usually taken out of the pen, when they have been detected, as they will otherwise distract tlie ram from further search. If only one man is on the job, he has to tie the ram securely inside the pen, while he takes out the de- tectecl ewes. If the ram is loosely tied, he may then serve ewes on heat, which still remain in the pen. In order to ensure that the teaser ram does not serve the ewes accidentally, some farmers tie a jute apron under tlie belly of the teaser ram, before lie is taken into the ewe pen. Tliis is the practice on the Agricultural Reasearch Institute’s Experi- mental Farm at Hestur, where much of the data in the present study were collected, but relatively few farmers use this practice. After the ewes on lieat on a particular day have been detected, they are taken to a place near the rams’ pen, where the mat- ing takes place. Tlie farmer has usually decided beforehand to wliich ram each ewe is to be mated, and the ewes are then in turn mated to the rams they have been as- signed to. Each ewe is ordinarily only mated once during the heat. Sometimes a ewe may be remated to the same ram the next day, if she is still on heat, but this is not ordin- ary pratice during the peak of the mating season, as the number of rams available is usually limited, and tliis would mean a much heavier use of each ram. Repeated mating may, however, be used during the second heat of a ewe, i.e. if she has failed to conceive at the first heat. Usually only one round is done each day in the ewe pens to detect ewes on heat, and the mating generally takes place from 0—2 hours from detection. Tlie ewes may thus have been on lieat from 0—26 hours, when the mating takes place, and on the average about 12—13 liours. This system of mating should give ac- curate records of parentage when the super- vision is carried out with care. The most likely sources of faulty parentage arising at the time of mating are the following: 1. Accidental, unnoticed mating of a ewe with the teaser ram. 2. Mistaken identity of the ewe during mating causing faulty records, i.e. the ewe mated is not the one that is re- corded as being mated. l’lie fault will eventually be discovered later, when the ewe, which was thought to have been mated, comes on heat, but the re- cord may not be properly corrected. Mistaken identity of rams during mat- ing may occur, but is very unlikely. 3. Records of the matings on a particular day may somtimes be written down from memory. after all the ewes on heat that day have been mated. It is obvious that this practice may intro- duce errors.
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