Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Qupperneq 16

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Qupperneq 16
14 ÍSLENZKAR LANDBUNAÐARRANNSÓKNIR phenomenon has also been found by Sánches Belda (1962). The hairy parts on the face and the out- side of the legs usually show a certain tvpe of agouti colouring, where the tip of the fibre is rustred in colour, while the re- mainder of the fibre is black. Colour 04 — black mouflon (Plate III, 2) This colour has also been called black reversed badgerface (Roberts and Jenkjn, 1926), but here it will be referred to as the mouflon pattern in accordance with Berge (1958), due to the resemblance be- tween this pattern and the colour pattern of the wild Mouflon. This colour is in many ways entirely the reverse of the black badgerface colour de- scribed above. The belly of the animal is dirty white, but occasionally one can de- tect a few fine ancl short, black undercoat fibres on the belly. The white colour stretches backwards into the crutch and up around the anus, and extends to the under- side of the tail. The brisket is white, and sometimes, but not always, a white band stretches from the brisket to the under- side of the neck. The underside of the lower jaw is white or near wliite. A light- coloured mark above the eye seems to be a permanent feature of this pattern. The inner side of the ears is white, or near white. The upper part of the body shows pre- dominantly black colour, although in many instances in the Icelandic slieep a pronounced agouti colouring of the birth coat is observed. This agouti colouring is sometimes different from the one observed in the black badgerface. In the black mou- flon the tip of the agouti fibre may be black followed by a rustred or greyish band, and from then on the fibre is black, but fibres with a light colour on the tip only may also be found in black mouflon lambs. The agouti colour is most pro- nounced on the lower part of the neck, but may occasionally be found alnrost all over the body. Sometimes it is almost com- pletely absent. The hairs on the head and feet in black mouflon animals usually show the same type of agouti colour as above, i.e. a black tip followed by a lighter band. The undercoat fibres on the upper part of the body always consist of black fibres. As the lambs get older, some of the outer- coat fibres on the upper part of the body may become white and show up in the pelt in autumn. These fibres are too few in number, however, for the colour to be mistakenly classified as grey mouflon. Colour 05 — black (Plate I, 3, I, 4 and III, 6) This colour produces only black fibres on the animals at birth, and no white fibres are found anywhere on the animal at least during the first few weeks after birth. After the age of 6 months, however, some animals may develop white fibres, mainly in the outercoat. The numbers of these fibres may increase so much with age tliat the animals may become grey in ap- pearance, particularly on the sides. A distinction between genuine grey and grey- ing black in adult sheep is tliat tlre under- coat of the greying black animal remains black throughout its life. PÁlsson (1944) describes three types of black in adult Icelandic sheep, i.e. pure black, where the colour remains pitchblack throughout the animal’s life, greying black, where white fibres develop in the outer- coat with advancing age, as described above, and browning black, where the black colour shows some fading towards brown with advancing age. No attempt was made in the present study to distingu- ish between these three types of black, as
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