Effect of growth promotant implants on liveweight change, wool and carcass characteristics of mature wethers grazing dry season pasturesExport / Share PlumX View Altmetrics View AltmetricsBortolussi, G. and Bird, A.R. (1998) Effect of growth promotant implants on liveweight change, wool and carcass characteristics of mature wethers grazing dry season pastures. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture, 38 (8). pp. 789-794. ISSN 0816-1089
Article Link: https://doi.org/10.1071/EA98075 AbstractThirty-two mature recently shorn wethers (mean liveweight 52.1 kg) were implanted with 1 of 4 different hormonal growth promotants (Ralgro, Compudose, Revalor-S and Synovex-H) to determine animal production responses on dry season pastures. The wethers were grazed for a period of 135 days on dry season native Mitchell grass (Astrebla spp.) pastures infested with Acacia nilotica. The wethers were weighed monthly. Four months after commencement of the experiment, the wethers were shorn to determine wool characteristics (micron, yield and staple length). At 2 weeks post-shearing the wethers were slaughtered to determine carcass attributes. We conclude that under declining nutritional conditions, hormonal growth promotant treatment of mature wethers with either Compudose or Synovex-H improves liveweight performance on dry season Astrebla spp. pastures. The small improvement in liveweight may not provide economic returns for sheep destined for Asian export or manufacturing meat markets. An implant dose of 8 mg of oestradiol (Compudose) or a combined dose of 75 mg of testosterone and 7.5 mg of oestradiol (Synovex-H), was adequate to stimulate liveweight gain under these conditions. The effects of implantation on carcass and fleece attributes require further investigation.
Repository Staff Only: item control page Download Statistics DownloadsDownloads per month over past year |