Ewe
Fertility in the STAR Accelerated Lambing System
R. M. Lewis and D. R. Notter
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
D. E. Hogue and B. H. Magee
Cornell University
Journal of Animal Science (1996) 74:1511-1522
ABSTRACT: Effects of environmental factors such as ewe age, season
of exposure, and time from lambing to exposure on fertility were
evaluated using records on 1,084 Dorset ewes in the STAR accelerated
lambing system. The STAR program consisted of five 30-d concurrent
breeding and lambing periods per year beginning on January 1, March
15, May 27, August 8, and October 20. Fertility in the flock changed
in a cyclic and predictable fashion during the year. Changes in
prolificacy were less consistent but also tended to show cyclic
variation. Matings that occurred within the typical breeding season
(August, October, and January) were more fertile than those occurring
in March and June. However, fertility also varied with the age
of the ewe and the time since the ewe's last lambing. Except in
June, fertility at the first postpartum mating increased as ewes
aged. In March and June matings, adult ewes that had just weaned
lambs were less fertile than ewes that had failed to conceive in
the previous season and therefore had longer postpartum intervals.
However, in October and January, ewes that had just weaned lambs
were more fertile. A matrix of expected pregnancy rates, or probabilities
of fertility, was constructed using a mixed GLM to describe the
combined effect of season, ewe age, and time since lambing on ewe
fertility in accelerated lambing. |