Showing posts with label puberty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puberty. Show all posts

June 10, 2009

Farm Animal Reproduction - Basic Principles

Agriculture, farming, animal husbandry, reproduction, principles, puberty, breeding seasons, breeding cycles, signs of oestrus, pregnancy, future technological developments, glossary

Farm Animal Reproduction - Basic Principles

By Dr Clive Dalton


Puberty
At a certain stage in an animal's life it reaches "sexual maturity". This is when it is capable of mating and reproducing. Size and liveweight are important factors affecting puberty, but breeding activity is controlled mainly by "physiological development" which is much more than just an increase in size or weight. It is how the body organs, especially the reproductive organs have developed.

Here are some average ages at which puberty occurs in farm animals, but realise that this can vary greatly, depending for example on how well the animals have been reared and fed.

Cattle 6 - 10 months
Sheep 7 - 8 months
Goat 7 - 9 months
Horse 1 - 2 years
Pig 4 - 5 months
Dog 6 - 9 months
Deer 14 - 18 months (varies with species)
Rabbit 5 months
Poultry 5 months

The Breeding Season and its Control
Under natural conditions animals don't breed when we want them to - they have a very definite "breeding season". This is strongly affected by the daylight and dark pattern - the scientific term "photoperiodicity" is used to describe this. The period when animals are not breeding is sometimes referred to as the "anoestrus" period.

Species vary, so for example the female sheep (ewe) starts her breeding season in the autumn as the days get shorter. The same occurs with the female goat (doe) and the female deer (hind in Red deer and doe in Fallow). Near the equator, sheep do not show this very seasonal breeding behaviour.

The males of these species will mate all the year round if a female in heat appears, but they show a greater desire to mate in the autumn. Male deer (Red deer stags and Fallow bucks) show a definite "rut" when they are very active and herd their mates into a group or harem and guard them. To some extent this behaviour is seen in male goat (buck or Billy), and in male sheep (ram) to a much smaller extent.

The female horse (mare) is the opposite to the above species. Her breeding season is stimulated by increasing daylight so she starts to breed in the spring a few days after giving birth. She is most sexually-active from November to January in New Zealand. The male horse (stallion) will mate all the year round if given the chance, but is also most sexually active in spring.

In the sow, her breeding cycle is stimulated by weaning the piglets. She comes on heat a few days after weaning which takes place at 6 or 8 weeks after birth. Sometimes taking the piglets from the sow for 24 hours is used to trigger breeding activity.

The cow is different again and will breed most of the year round but shows less breeding activity in the winter. Bulls will mate any time of the year.

This effect of daylight is clearly seen when animals are moved from one hemisphere to another. They alter their breeding seasons to suit the new light pattern. Near the equator with equal day and night, animals tend to be less seasonal in their breeding patterns.

Breeding seasons (Southern hemisphere)
  • Animals that breed in Autumn (Feb. - May) – sheep, goat, deer
  • Animals that breed in Spring (Sept. - Feb.) – horse
  • Animals that breed all year – cattle, pig, dog, rabbit, poultry
The Breeding cycle
Once the female animal has come out of the anoestrus period and starts its breeding season, it then shows a definite cycle when it will mate. We say that the animal has started to "cycle" and at set times in this cycle she will be willing to let a male mate with her.

Each species differs in their breeding cycle. Below is a summary giving an average value and a range around that average. Note the wide variation in some species.

Breeding cycles in farm animals
Cattle 21 days (range 18 - 24 days)
Sheep 17 days (14 - 21)
Goat 21 days (19 - 22)
Horse 21 days (19 - 40)
Pig 21 days (19 - 22)
Dog 6 months
Deer 18 days (14 - 22)

Heat or Oestrus
First note the spelling. "Oestrus" is the noun and "oestrous" is the adjective. Estrus is the American spelling for the same thing. We do not use it in New Zealand.

Heat or oestrus is the length of time that the female will stand to be mated or "served" by the male. There are a number of words used to describe oestrous, for example:
  • On heat (general use)
  • In oestrus (general use)
  • Bulling (in the cow)
  • Riding (in the cow)
  • Brimming (in the sow)
  • Hot on (in the mare)
  • Tupping (in the sheep)

Here is a summary of some average values for time on heat, and a range which you will find with animals in a real farm situation.

Oestrus lengths in farm animals

Cattle 14 hours (range 10 - 30 hours)
Sheep 24 hours (4 - 72 hours)
Goat 48 hours (2 - 3 days)
Horse 5 days (4 hours - 11 days)
Pig 24 hours (12 - 60 hours)
Dog 7 days (5 - 15 days)
Deer little known. A few hours

Signs of heat
Species vary greatly in their behaviour, and within a species there is great variation as well. So you have to be very observant and for example look for a combination of one or more signs of heat to confirm your diagnosis.

A female will not let a male mount and serve during the whole of the oestrous period. So you have to recognise the actual period of "standing oestrus" or standing heat when she will stand both to be mounted and served. It seems that nature has designed this behaviour to frustrate the male and concentrate the sperm in his reproductive tract. The main practical point to accept is that the mating pair may need time and impatience on the part of the stockperson will not do any good at all.

Cow:
There are a number of signs to use such as:
  • Mucous discharge from the vulva.
  • Swelling of the vulva.
  • Bellowing and restless.
  • Seeking the company of other cattle (sexually active groups).
  • Riding and being ridden by other cows in a group of 3 - 5 others.
  • Mud on her flanks showing she has been ridden.
  • Withholding her milk - lowered production.
  • Walking around the paddock a lot.
  • Hair (or applied paint) rubbed off the tail bone and pins.
  • Standing to be mated by a bull.
Sheep and goat
There are very few signs of heat in the ewe, even when a ram is near. Ewes go and seek out the ram but do not mount each other like cows. The ram "hunt sniffs" through the flock and if a ewe on heat is approached by a ram, it will "tail fan" or waggle it's tail, stand still and turn its head to the rear to look at the ram.

The goat has similar behaviour to the sheep.

Pig
The sow vulva swells and in white pigs becomes pink. A sow on heat stands rock solid when pushed from behind. In AI the sow is straddled by the stockman and if she stands this is a sign of peak heat. Sows wander around a lot looking for a boar, often with ears pricked and making short high pitched grunt.

Horse
The mare is restless, will urinate a lot and stands with her hind legs splayed. If a stallion is near she "winks or flashes" her vulva. This is called "clitoral or vaginal winking" when she lifts her tail and exposes her vulva to a prospective male. She will call out to other horses and responds to the stallion's high pitched call.

Deer
There are very few signs of heat in deer other than the animal's response to the stag. Hinds will preen themselves and go and rub themselves and preen the stag. Courtship and mating is very rapid in deer.

Dog
The vulva of the bitch will become red and swollen and thick mucous and blood may be seen. She will urinate and the smell of this will excite the male. She may stand and then race around and play and tease the dog. He may solicit this behaviour too. If the male is slow to mount the bitch may mount him. Other females may mount the bitch in heat. In standing heat, the bitch stands with her back curved and tail held to the side.

Bull's Reproductive Organs
Learn to draw the male reproductive organs and label the different parts.
The bull's reproductive organs are present at birth and after puberty he is able to produce and deliver sufficient sperm to fertilise females.

Sperm or spermatozoa
These are the male contribution (called the male gamete) to the offspring and contain his genes which are carried on chromosomes in the nucleus of the cell. The normal healthy sperm is like a tadpole under the microscope and has a head with the nucleus inside, a body and a tail which moves rapidly to propel the sperm. Abnormal sperm under the microscope have bent tails.

The testicles
The male has two testicles held in the scrotum or purse. At puberty they drop through the inguinal canal (a hole in the body wall) so that they benefit from the lower temperature outside the body. This helps the sperm to remain fertile.

Bulls with large testicles have been shown to be more fertile and have greater libido than those with small testicles. Beef breeders now select for scrotal circumference in their bulls as a good indirect measure of fertility.

Testicles that do not descend through the inguinal canal in the body wall may cause problems. An animal with one or more undescended testicles is called a "rig" and some of them are fertile.

Squeezing the testicles back out of the scrotum and then removing the scrotum with a rubber ring makes the animal infertile as the testicles are kept at a higher temperature either back up through the inguinal canal of more likely under the skin along the belly of the animal. The animal still grows as fast as an "entire" male as it has the full benefit of its testosterone. It is called a "cryptorchid". But beware, there is always the chance that one of them could produce enough viable sperm to get a female pregnant as they certainly have the libido to try.

The testicles continually produce sperm which is then stored and matured in the coiled tube or "epididymis" at the base of the testicle.

Sperm then move up the narrow tube called the vas deferens into the urethra or tube down the centre of the bull's penis along which both sperm and urine from the bladder flows.

Testosterone
The testicles also play an important role in the male's sexually behaviour. There are cells in the testicles (sometimes referred to as testes) called "interstitial tissue" that produce a hormone called "testosterone". Its production is stimulated by another hormone called "pituitrin" produced in the pituitary gland below the brain.

Testosterone has four functions:
  • It gives the bull it's sex drive or "libido
  • It increases the growth rate of males
  • It develops male characteristics
  • It develops the accessory glands

Accessory glands
Near the base of the bladder there are a number of "accessory glands" which provide fluids that lubricate the sperm. These are called the:
  • The prostate gland (note the spelling)
  • The seminal vesicles
  • Cowper's gland
The mixture of sperm and accessory fluids is called "semen".

The penis
The bull's penis is a strong muscular organ. When the bull becomes sexually excited testosterone causes an increased blood flow to the penis and it goes from a "flaccid" state to the "erect" state. The arrector muscle pulls the bend out of it so that it protrudes from the sheath or "prepuce" ready for entry into the vagina and on "ejaculation" discharges the semen and fluids.

A single ejaculate of about 5-10 ml contains about four billion sperm. At current dilution rates of sperm this one ejaculate could inseminate 6 - 8,000 cows. Each insemination contains about 2 million sperm.

The end of the penis is called the "glans penis" and varies in different species because of the shape of the cervix in the female. The bull for example has an arrow head type glans while the ram has a worm-like structure on the end (villiform appendage). The boar has a corkscrew shape on his penis which locks into the sow's cervix with a left hand thread action. The stallion has a large chrysanthemum-like structure on its glans, while the dog has a bulbous gland on its penis which inflates after ejaculation and locks the dog inside the bitch for a while. He dismounts and remains "knotted". They should not be pulled apart of have water thrown over them!

Cow's Reproductive Organs
Learn to draw and label the reproductive system of the cow.

The vulva and vagina
The vulva are the outside lips of the vagina. The shape of the vulva with its extended lips project the urine off the body of the animal when it urinates.

The vagina leads into the main body of the reproductive tract and is where sperm from the male is deposited at mating. It is also where the entrance to the bladder via the urethra can be found.

At the end anterior end of the vagina is the cervix with the entrance called the os.

The cervix and uterus
The cervix is the neck or entrance to the uterus or womb. The actual entrance to the cervix is called the "os" (pronounced oss). The cervix is a muscular structure made up of many folds. This is a natural barrier to keep infection out of the uterus, and has to be penetrated by the pipette when the animal is artificially inseminated. With natural mating the sperm have to find their way through the cervix and many perish on the way.

The cervix of sheep is much more muscular than in the cow, and in the sow the boar has to be locked into the cervix before ejaculation occurs.

The uterus is made up of two "horns" and is where the fertilised ovum or "embryo" is attached. In animals that have more than one offspring or have litters (called multiparous), these can develop in either or both horns. In single-offspring species (called uniparous), the "foetus" grows in the main body of the uterus. In pigs for example, you will find a foetus along the length of each horn and the "runt" or small member of the litter is usually found in the top of the horn and is born last.

The Fallopian tubes
These are the narrow tubes down which the egg or "ovum" flows from the ovary and where fertilisation takes place. The ovum coming down meets the sperm coming up. Sometimes the term "oviduct" is given to this part of the system. At the top of the Fallopian tube is a cup-like structure called the "infundibulum" which catches the egg after it has been shed from the ovary.

The ovary
This organ produces the ova or eggs from the female. A young heifer calf for example has many hundreds of thousands of eggs in its ovaries ready to develop after puberty and which will mature and be produced over the animal's lifetime.
The ova are produced in waves

Hormonal Control in the Female
Successful reproduction in the female depends on a number of separate organs working together. These are:
  • the hypothalamus or lower part of the brain
  • the pituitary gland - a gland the size of a pea under the brain
  • the ovary
  • the uterus
Hormones are "chemical messengers". At puberty a hormone from the pituitary gland activates the ovary and a number of ova start to develop. This hormone is called "Follicle Stimulating Hormone" or FSH.

One ovum wins the race (in species that produce one offspring), and it matures into a follicle which looks like a red blister on the ovary surface. In animals that produce litters, both ovaries will carry these ripening follicles.

While the follicle is developing, it secretes a hormone into the bloodstream called "oestrogen". This causes the animal to show signs of heat or oestrus.

As well as causing oestrus, oestrogen stimulates the pituitary gland to produce a hormone called "Luteinising Hormone" or LH. This causes the follicle to rupture and the egg drops into the Fallopian tube to work its way down to meet the sperm when present. Fertilisation takes place in the top one third of the Fallopian tube and on about day 4, the fertilised egg or embryo is implanted into the wall of the uterus.

After the follicle bursts, the membrane that covered the follicle and the cells lining the follicle cavity produce a structure called the "Corpus Luteum" or CL. It is sometimes called the "yellow body" and has the important function of producing a hormone called "Progesterone". This is the "hormone of pregnancy". It stimulates the wall of the uterus to accept the fertilised egg and stops other follicles from maturing. This continues until the foetus can produce enough of its own progesterone to maintain the pregnancy.

If the female does not become pregnant, a hormone called "prostaglandin:" is produced by the uterus and this dissolves the Corpus Luteum so the whole cycle starts again.

Fertilisation

The sperm meet the egg in the top third of the Fallopian tube. The rhythmic contraction of the uterus waft the sperm up the tubes and there are still millions of them present at this stage of their journey despite huge losses on the way. Sperm gather around the egg vibrating the shell, all trying to penetrate. This vibration alters the pH of the shell and assists penetration of the sperm. Only one succeeds and then the shell becomes impervious to the others which then die.

The seminal fluid from the accessory glands has an important role. Initially its role is to provide a fluid to help the sperm to flow. However, after a time it then changes its role and kills off the sperm. It seems as if Nature has intended the sperm to have a limited life and this varies greatly with species.

Pregnancy
The sperm and egg are each single cells, and after joining start to multiply from two cells to four to eight, and so on. It is at these early stages before the eggs have attached that they can be flushed out of the Fallopian tubes and implanted into other animals.

This is called "Ovum Transfer" (OT) if they are collected and transplanted before fertilisation, or "Embryo Transfer" (ET) if collected and implanted after fertilisation.

They can also be split at this time or the contents called "germ plasm", which is a jelly-like substance, can be taken out and put into other egg shells.

In the cow implantation takes place on the same side of the uterus as the ovary from which the egg is shed. Attachment is caused by cells in the shell which form membranes that attach to the wall of the uterus. They serve to surround and protect the new embryo and start to form the "placenta" by which the embryo is fed from the dam.

In the cow this placenta forms into a bag around the calf which is seen at birth as the "afterbirth". The contact between the cow's blood supply and the calf's blood supply is through structures called "cotyledons" which work rather like Velcro and pull apart at birth. If they do not separate at birth the cow end up with a retained afterbirth which has to be treated to prevent infection of the uterus or "metritis".

In the horse and the pig the placenta does not have cotyledons but lines the entire uterus. This is called "diffuse" placentation in contrast to "cotyledenous" placentation. In the mare the placenta or afterbirth comes out as a large two-horned bag after the foal is born.

The dam not only feeds the calf through the placenta, but also removes all waste products as well. So the blood flow through the placenta is very important.

The first organs to develop in the calf or "foetus" are the brain and central nervous system, the heart and blood vessels. By the end of the first quarter of pregnancy most of the internal organs are formed and functioning in the foetus.

Pregnancy in different species
Cow 282 days (9 months + 3 days)
Sheep 140 - 150 days (5 months)
Goat 150 - 156 days
Horse 340 (325 - 347 days) (11 months & 11 days)
Pig 115 days (3 months, 3 weeks and 3 days)
Dog 58 - 63 days (9 weeks)
Deer 226 - 233 days. (Wapiti - 255 days)
Rabbit 31 days

Note the wide variation in some species.

Birth
During pregnancy the muscles of the uterus remain inactive. Shortly before birth the muscles in the cervix and the vagina relax in preparation for birth. The cartilage and ligaments in the pelvic area also become more flexible ready for the calf to pass through the pelvic cavity.

At birth, the muscles of the uterus undergo spasms or contractions to push the calf out towards the birth canal though the pelvis. In normal presentations this is head and feet first like a diver. Normally the placental link with the mother - the umbilical cord, remains intact until the calf hits the ground. Once born this is broken and the lungs inflate to allow the calf to breath on its own.

When calves are born backwards (breech presentations) the cord may break before the animal can breath through its lungs, and it can drown if the delivery is delayed.

The triggering of birth comes through a hormone from the foetus and not the mother.


Control of Reproduction
Good farm management requires control of animal reproduction. For example we want calving to coincide with the time when grass growth is at its peak, or we may want animals to give birth to suit particular markets. To improve animal performance we want to breed from the best and cull the worst. This demands control of reproduction.

There are a number of techniques used to influence the natural reproduction pattern. These include:
  • Castration
  • Vasectomy
  • Cryptorchids
  • Speying
  • Hormonal treatment - injections, implants under the skin, vaginal insertions (CIDRs)

CIDRs are used to get anoestrus animals to start cycling, and also to "synchronise" the breeding activity of those that have started to cycle so that they all come on heat together.

Future developments
Advances in reproductive technology are the way these genes will be multiplied and made commercially available. Here’s a brief description of some of these techniques which are at varying stages of commercial availability:

MOET: “Multiple ovulation and embryo transfer” - sometimes called “super-ovulation and embryo flushing”. The cow is stimulated to produce many more eggs (oocytes) than normal at ovulation, then after insemination the embryos are flushed from the uterus through the vagina. Very large numbers of embryos can be harvested but five good quality ones per flush is a realistic average. These can be implanted in to other cows treated with hormones to be at the correct stage of their cycle, or frozen for later use or sale.

TVR: “Trans-vaginal recovery” – also called “ovum pickup”. In TVR oocytes are taken directly from the cow’s ovaries and the operation can be performed on yearlings or cows soon after calving or even in early pregnancy. Oocytes can also be taken from cows immediately after death; this is called GR or “genetic rescue” and is an ideal way of exploiting the genes of former top-performing cows in the herd.

IVP: “In vitro production” is where embryos are grown in the laboratory and there are three stages to this. First is IVM or “in vitro maturation”, then IVF or “in vitro fertilisation” and lastly IVC or “in vitro culture” – the whole process taking eight days.

Sexed semen: This has been possible for some years (currently with 90% accuracy), but is not commercially available on a large scale yet. It’s ideal for an AI programme to breed females for replacements or males for beef.


Embryo genotyping: Here the genotype of the embryo can be checked before implantation. The aim is to avoid spreading defective genes and multiplying good genes – once they have been found. Currently there are only a few available but as the cow genome or genetic map is researched, more will be commercially available.

Embryo multiplication: This is the process of taking one embryo and dividing it up at the appropriate (early) stage to produce identical twins, triplets, quads – or more.

JIVET: “Juvenile in vitro embryo transfer”. This is where IVP is done on calves (one month old) and when perfected will be a powerful tool to reduce generation interval which is limited by the age of normal puberty. Currently results are not commercially satisfactory.


Clones: Clones are totally identical in their genetic makeup and have been produced from body cells as opposed to sperm or eggs. Dolly the sheep for example was produced from a cell from her mother’s udder. Cattle have been cloned and used commercially in AI to produce two bulls to meet a large demand for semen that one bull could not supply.

Short-gestation semen: Semen from bulls that have been selected to produce calves which are born less than the average 280 days gestation. The best bull currently available will shorten gestation on his calves by 8.4 days. These bulls are used by dairy farmers at the end of their AI programme to reduce calving spread.

Freeze-dried semen: When this is available commercially, it will make transport and delivery of semen easier.


Glossary
AB: Artificial Breeding ( same as AI)
Abortion: premature expulsion of the foetus.
Accessory fluids: fluids produced by glands to help sperm to flow.
Accessory glands: glands that produce accessory fluids.
Afterbirth: the membranes (placenta) that have surrounded the developing foetus and attaching it to the dam.
Amniotic fluid:
the protective fluid around the foetus.
Anoestrus: the non-cycling period when oestrus is not shown.
Artificial vagina or AV: device a male serves into to for semen collection.
AI or Artificial insemination: placing sperm inside the female tract with a pipette.
Barren: failing to reproduce or incapable of reproducing.
Bearing: protruding or collapsed vagina.
Birth rank: the number born eg singles, twins, triplets, etc.
Breeding crate: a box designed to take the weight of a heavy male (eg boar) when serving a smaller female.
Bulling: see oestrus.
Buller: a nymphomaniac cow.
Amniotic fluid: the fluid around the foetus.
Castration: removal of the testicles of a male.
Cervix: the opening or neck of the uterus.
CIDR: a device in the female vagina to control breeding by slow release of hormones.
Colostrum: the first milk of the dam rich in antibodies.
Conception: fertilisation of an egg by a sperm.
Conception Rate (CR): percentage of females that do not return to oestrus, or are diagnosed pregnant.
Copulation: the act of mating.
Corpus Luteum: the structure which develops from the follicle after the egg is shed. May be called the "yellow body". Plural is "Corpora Lutea.
Corticosteriods: hormones produced from the adrenal glands and used to induce parturition or birth.
Cotyledon: the structure by which the foetal and maternal placenta are joined in the cow.
Cryptorchid: a male made infertile by pushing the testicles up into the body cavity and removing the scrotum.
Cycling: same as oestrus.
Chin ball harness: a device fitted to a bull to leave an ink mark on the mounted cow.
Dry: a animal that has not reproduced, or has finished lactating
Dystocia: birth difficulty.
Egg: same as ovum.
Ejaculate: ejecting the sperm from the penis. Or what is collected from this action and made up of sperm and seminal fluid.
Electroejaculation: collecting semen from a male using electrical stimulation.
Embryo: the early stage of development of the young in the uterus or shell
Embryo Transfer (ET): transferring embryos from one female to another.
Endoscope: same as a laproscope.
Entire: an uncastrated male.
Fecundity: a measure of the number of offspring born or reared.
Fertility: a measure of the female to conceive and produce offspring, or of the male to fertilise the female.
Fertilisation: the act of male sperm meeting female ovum and causing pregnancy.
Flushing: washing ova or embryos from the female's reproductive tract.
Flushing: in sheep feeding ewes well 2-3 weeks before joining with ram to increase the eggs shed and hence lambs born.
Foetus: the unborn animal in the womb.
Follicle: the structure in the ovary where an ovum matures.
Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH): hormone produced by the pituitary gland which controls ovulation in females and sperm production in males.
Fostering: making a mother accept an offspring from another dam, or giving an offspring to another dam to rear.
Freemartin: in cattle, a female born twin to a male is usually infertile.
Gamete: a reproductive cell (sperm or ovum).
Gestation: the time of pregnancy between conception and birth.
Glans: the structure on the end of the male's penis.
Gonads: a general term for the reproductive glands (ovaries & testicles)
Gonadotrophins: hormones from the pituitary gland that control the reproductive system.
Heat: the period when the animal shows willingness to be mated.
Hermaphrodite: a bisexual animal that has both male and female sexual organs.
Hormone: a "chemical messenger". Secretions from special glands that circulate in the bloodstream and affects different body functions.
Induction: a technique to cause early onset of birth buy using hormones.
In utero: a term which means in the uterus.
In vitro: means outside the body.
In vitro fertilisation (IVF): fertilisation in a test tube.
Joining: putting a male with a female animal for mating.
Laparoscope: a telescope for examining inside an animal's body through a small incision.
Laparoscopy: the examination done with a laparoscope.
Luteinising Hormone (LH): hormone from the pituitary which controls ovulation in females and testosterone production in males.
Libido: sex drive or urge to mate.
Mating: the act of mating. Animals may be joined but not mate.
Mating harness: a device fitted to males to colour mark females after mating.
Mortality: a measure of offspring born dead or died soon after birth.
Mothering: same as fostering.
Mothering ability: the ability of a dam to look after its young.
Mounting: one animal jumping up on another in an attempt to mate.
Multiparous: a dam that has many offspring or had many pregnancies.
Non parous: a female which has not given birth.
Nymphomaniac: female in continuous oestrus
Oestrogens: female steroid hormones secreted by growing ovarian follicles and which are concerned with oestrus.
Oestrus: period when the animal will stand to be mated.
Oestrous (adjective): same as oestrus.
On-the-drop: female about to give birth.
Out-of-season breeding: breeding animals outside their normal season.
Ovary: the female organ that produces the ova or eggs.
Ovulate: the act of shedding the egg or ovulation.
Ovulation rate: measured by inspecting the ovary and counting the corpora lutea.
Ovum: a single egg. Plural is ova.
Ovum Transfer (OT): collecting eggs from the female and putting them into other females.
Parity: how many pregnancies and animal has had.
Parous: a dam which has had offspring.
Parturition: same as birth.
Pellet: a small lump of frozen semen.
Perinatal mortality: mortality of young around birth.
Pheromone: chemical secreted by one animal that influences the sexual behaviour of another.
Pituitary gland: gland at the base of the brain which secretes hormones that control functions like reproduction and milking.
Placenta: the organ which attaches the offspring to its dam and through which it is fed.
Pregnant Mare Serum Gonadotrophin (PSMG): a hormone used in reproduction control to stimulate ovulation.
Pregnancy diagnosis (PD): finding out which animals are pregnant by hand palpation or using an electronic instrument.
Post-calving interval: the time between calving and first heat.
Premature: an animal born before its full term.
Prepuce: the sheath of skin around the protracted (withdrawn) penis.
Progesterone: a hormone produced by the Corpus Luteum which stimulates the uterus to accept the embryo and then maintains pregnancy.
Prolapse: eversion (turning inside out) or the vagina, uterus or rectum.
Prostaglandin: hormone produced by the uterus and used in reproduction control.
Puberty: the stage when the animal reaches sexual maturity.
Reproductive wastage: loss of eggs or embryos between mating and birth.
Returns-to-service: females that do not become pregnant and continue to cycle.
Riding: same as mounting.
Rig: an animal with one or both undescended testicles.
Season: "in season" is the same as "on heat"
Semen: the male reproductive cells made up of spermatozoa and accessory fluids.
Service: the act of the male mating the female.
Service interval: the time between services received by a female.
Sheath: another name for the prepuce, or the plastic cover for the pistolette used in AI.
Synchronisation: getting animals to show oestrus all at the same time using hormones.
Sperm or spermatozoa: the male sex cells or gametes.
Speying: surgical removal of the ovaries to prevent pregnancy. The Fallopian tubes many also be tied to prevent sperm meeting ova.
Springing: showing signs of birth such as udder development.
Straw: the fine plastic tube semen is packed in for AI.
Super ovulation: stimulating the female to produce larger than normal numbers of ova.
Tail painting: Putting paint on the tail head of cows which is then rubbed off or scuffed when mounted by other cows and denotes oestrus.
Teaser female: female with ovaries removed and used to stimulate males.
Teaser male: a vasectomised male.
Testicle: the male organ where sperm are produced.
Testes: same as testicles.
Testosterone: hormone produced by cells in the testicle.
Tubal ligation: tying the Fallopian tubes as in speying.
Uterus: the female organ in which the calf grows.
Vagina: anterior part of female reproductive tract.
Vulva: the outside lips of the vagina.
Yellow body: same as Corpus Luteum.

January 24, 2009

Cattle farm husbandry – the bull

Cattle, farming, husbandry, the bull, age to buy, horns or polled, puberty age, libido & fertility, traits to look for when purchasing, performance records, management when with cows and aferwards, ringing a bull, safety in handling.


By Dr Clive Dalton


Can you do without a bull?


It’s a good idea to try avoid keeping a bull for these reasons:
  • Bulls are dangerous and regularly injure and kill people. Include them on your OSH hazard list near the top.
  • They are generally expensive if you buy a decent one.
  • They eat more than a cow - sometimes nearer what two small-breed cows would eat.
  • They break fences and gates and visit neighbours’ cows when not invited.
  • They love digging holes to mark their territory - and as soon as you fill them in they dig them out again. Then other bulls come and enlarge the holes which fill with water.
  • They love to fight with other bulls, especially strange bulls belonging to neighbours.
  • They get very territorial and dangerous as they get older.
  • They can be very musical and roar all night at other cattle in adjoining paddocks.
  • You’ll need to change a bull before he comes round to mate his daughters.
  • As bulls age they often get arthritis and feet problems, and these can be a major job to treat and need special facilities and vet bills.
  • Bulls can spread venereal diseases through the herd.
  • There is always some concern about a bull’s fertility and sex drive – both can vary over time.

What are the alternatives?
  • Use Artificial Insemination (AI) or Artificial Breeding (AB).
  • Borrow or lease a bull. Leasing a bull is now common with dairy farmers, and there are plenty of people who supply a wide range of dairy and beef bulls for lease. These bulls must have been tested for Tb and EBL, and now vets are recommending that they be BVD free as well.
  • Do not take any animal on to your property without clear evidence of freedom from all of these diseases. Check with your veterinarian about these disease threats.
  • Take your cows to the neighbour’s bull. You will have to pay a grazing and service fee. The cost could be about $12/week for grazing, and the price of the bull divided by the number of calves he produces.
  • There are a few ways to work out these charges. But again, make sure the bull and the herd your cows are going to for mating are disease free - especially their Tb status.
  • Share the bull, week-by-week-about with a neighbour. Remember that a cow cycles every 21 days so if you are second in the queue for the bull, your calving dates will be later by these intervals.

What age of bull to buy?
  • Generally it’s best to buy a young bull, as there are generally fewer risks with health and physical problems like feet and being overweight.
  • A yearling bull can be ideal, provided you put him with experienced older cows as he may have to learn a few tricks of the trade. It won’t take him long.
  • It’s a good idea to put an older experienced bull with young heifers, provided he is not too heavy and may damage them when mating.
  • It’s important to realise that the age of the bull will not affect the size of the calf at birth. It’s the bull’s genetics that dictate this, and the size and feeding of the cow during pregnancy.
  • Using a yearling bull on heifers to avoid calving troubles may not work. He may have the genes for high growth rate, which he will pass on to his calves, starting at birth, regardless of his age when he is used.
  • If you use a good bull as a yearling, he will retain a lot of his value as a two-year-old if you want to sell him the next season for breeding. An older bull after use is more likely to be valued at works price as a potter bull which will be good because he’ll be heavy.

Horned or polled bulls?
  • Horns are pre-historic appendages not needed on modern cattle. They bruise meat, damage hides, and injure people. They are certainly weapons you don’t want to have on a bull.
  • Give high priority to breeds that are polled, and if you need to use a horned breed, get your veterinarian to dehorn him properly as soon as he arrives on your property. This will be a messy operation that will cost you money.
  • Cutting the tips off a bull’s horns is not proper dehorning and can make them more damaging.
  • Don’t lease horned bulls as the risks are too great.

Puberty
Bulls reach puberty around 9-12 months old but young bull calves from 4 months old sucking their mothers can become sexually active so it pays to watch them. It’s only their lack of reach that prevents them doing the job!

Libido and fertility
  • Fertility” is the bull’s ability to produce viable sperm, and to measure it you need to check a sample of his semen.
  • Only bulls at AI centres are trained to serve into an artificial vagina (AV) so on the farm a semen sample is obtained by electrical ejaculation.
  • This is not always reliable as you only get a trickle out of the bull and not a good ejaculation as with an AV.
  • You can also check fertility by seeing how many cows return to oestrus after the first 18-24 days of him joining the herd. But if he’s infertile you will have lost time on calving next year.
  • Libido” is the bull’s sex drive. He may have plenty of it but be infertile, so the two may not go together. His sex drive for females may take time to develop if he has been reared in a homosexual group of young bulls. He may need time to learn his trade.
  • Some beef breeders now offer bulls after having a libido test done before sale. This “serving capacity” test indicates how many times the bull will mount and correctly serve a female held in a headbail in a certain time. It has to be done under veterinary supervision as the restrained females can get knocked about and injured.
  • If your newly-purchased bull has libido or fertility problems, contact the vendor or your vet immediately, as you should be able to claim money back or get a replacement animal.
  • Top breeders will always replace defective bulls, but you will have lost time finding out and next year’s calving will be delayed.
  • Bulls will mate all year round and do not show a “rut” like sheep, goats and deer.
  • Mounting and ejaculation are very quick by a bull where he grasps the cow with his front legs and his whole weight is propelled forward on the cow on his final thrust. This can be a tonne of beef in a large bull and can damage a heifer if she goes down risking breaking her legs and pelvis.

Physical traits should you look for in a bull
  • Feet - the bull should stand evenly on all claws of all feet. There should be no misshapen claws or crossed toe nails.
  • Walking - he is going to have to do a lot of this, as well as mounting on his hind legs. Make sure he can walk freely and his back legs don’t look too straight or stiff (called post legged). He should have flexible pasterns and hocks. Give him a “hurry-up” and see if he can move easily. The owner may not like this but it’s your money you are spending.
  • Testicles - these should be large as sperm capacity is related to size. At some bull sales scrotum circumference is recorded in the catalogue. The testicles should be loose inside the scrotum if you’re brave enough to feel them. If in doubt get a vet to check them along with the health of the bull’s penis. Good vendors have all this done before sale time.
Where is the meat?
  • You can spend a lot of time over the finer details of "conformation" but just make sure the meat is on the rear end (the expensive cuts) rather than the front end (the cheap cuts).
  • And make sure that the bull looks like what a bull of that breed should look like, (in trade terms “true to type”).
  • Use some experienced person who knows stock to help you assess this.

Breeders with performance records?
Buy from a breeder who has a sound breeding programme and is making genetic progress. The NZ Beef Council, PO Box 4025, Wellington, will give you advice on this.

What to do when you get a new bull home
  • NEVER TRUST A BULL –and if in any doubt, always have someone and/or a good cattle dog with you when handling a bull.
  • A hand-reared friendly pet bull is the most dangerous of all as one day he’ll want to play with you!
  • Give a new bull a quiet journey home in his own pen in the truck.
  • Unload him carefully to avoid injury.
  • Put him in a well-fenced paddock within sight of other cattle or give him some steers for company and keep an eye them.
  • Keep him away from other bulls - in both sight and sound if possible.
  • Check that he has respect for electric fences and gates. If not, you’ll have to have a strategy to fix this problem quickly, or he’ll build on his experience and become an escapologist.
  • Six metres is a bull’s “flight or fight” distance so keep out if it as much as you can.

How many cows per bull?
  • A good rule is 3% + 1 bulls for cows, and 4% + 1 for heifers during the main mating season. Never have less than two bulls available.
  • If you have not fertility-tested your bull, change him over with a different one every 7-10 days depending on how he looks. Veterinarians regularly find 10% of bulls are infertile which is far too high a figure.
  • It takes 60 days for sperm to mature in the testicles so make sure all bulls are in top health long before mating.
  • Fighting among bulls is common during mating, so watch for injuries to shoulders, legs, and penises. Change bulls more regularly if they are prone to fighting and you may have to find a combination of bulls that agree to get on together and share the work.
  • For bulls to run with the cows after an AI programme is finished (called tailing up), then assume that about 60% of cows should be pregnant and then 3% +1 bulls should do the job. There should not be a lot of work left for them to do but keep a close eye on this just in case.

Management when the bull is with the cows.

  • Let nature take its course but be vigilant and check the bull (or bulls) every day.
  • Check that he is achieving a proper erection when mounting the cows and is serving into the cow's vagina correctly.
  • Make sure that a bull actually has a good ejaculation with all four feet off the ground in the final thrust. If he just seems to “fiddle about” and doesn’t ejaculate with a cow on standing heat, then suspect a problem and have your veterinarian check him.
  • A bull may serve a cow up to 3 times before she stops accepting him. Separating the bull from the cow is danger time for the handler, as the bull always wants one more service and will try to get back to the cow - perhaps with you in the way.
  • Keep checking for injuries and exhaustion if he is losing interest and not working.
  • He may be lying down a lot which should be viewed with suspicion. Give him a week off if you have another bull available.
  • On a small block with few cows, boredom will be the bull’s main problem. Watch that he doesn’t start to pay too much interest in the neighbours’ cows or bulls – and start showing his dominance over you too.

Management after mating
  • Work out when you want calving to finish and remove the bull 283 days before that date. There can be a 14 day spread either side of that pregnancy date.
  • Take the bull out and put him in a separate paddock with some mates if you want to keep him. With a quiet bull he may be quite happy in a paddock on his own as long as he is within sight of other cattle.
  • He may need to build up condition lost during mating, but make sure he doesn’t get too fat.
  • If you are not worried about calving spread, then just leave him with the cows all the time. This is not a good idea.
  • If you are not keeping him, book the truck to his next destination (sale or slaughter) the day he comes out from the cows unless he’s really skinny and you want to put some weight on him. It’s often wise to forget about adding value and bid him farewell!

A nose ring or not?
  • If your bull does not have a ring in his nose, then forget about the idea.
  • And if he does, then don’t ever think you can control him by hanging on to it, as bulls are far too strong. If you insist on a bull having a ring, then get your veterinarian to put it in using an anaesthetic for the nose and a shot to keep the rest of his bulk quiet. Never try to put one of those self-piercing rings in without a vet as you’ll get killed.

Farming bulls for beef
  • This is a very specialist enterprise and is not for small farms or lifestyle blocks.
  • Management needs to concentrate on keeping the bulls quiet and feeding them well to average 1kg/head/day over the 12 months they are on the farm, and then getting rid of them so you operate an annual programme.
  • Any stress or disturbance in the system will be exploited by the bulls and they’ll waste time fighting, riding and injuring themselves – and not putting on weight.
  • The love to dig holes to claim territory and strip and break young trees.
  • The will wreck fences and gates and often dig holes below fences in confrontations with stock in the next paddock.
  • Once an injured bull is taken out of a mob, unless he recovers within a few days, putting him back is a lost cause as he’ll be seen as a stranger and be ridden and injured again – and even killed.
  • The best systems are either to set stock them with plenty or room to avoid conflict, or keep them intensively and move them on to new feed every one of two days.
  • Get rid of them before they get territorial after 12 months old.
  • Some bull beef farmers keep a Jack donkey with each mob to stop fighting. The Jack seems to act as part referee and part bouncer but donkey breeders hate this as the donkeys can get injured and they go lame with “founder” eating all the high-protein grass and bull farmers never trim their feet.

Disclaimer This material is provided in good faith for information purposes only, and the author does not accept any liability to any person for actions taken as a result of the information or advice (or the use of such information or advice) provided in these pages.

January 4, 2009

Sheep Farm Husbandry - Reproduction and the ram

By Dr Clive Dalton

Ram correctly serving a ewe in full standing oestrus

It’s too easy to forget about the ram. They certainly get plenty of attention during their selection and purchase, and up to the day they are joined with the ewes, but when they’ve done their work, there’s a great temptation to put them in the back paddock and forget about them. In this modern age of “disposables’ the ram fits in well; we use them and then throw them away. They deserve better.

Basic ram facts
  • Ram lambs reach puberty about 6 months of age, but beware of even younger ram lambs missed at docking that can easily be fertile by autumn. Their hidden identity seems to make them more virile!
  • Rams are most active in the autumn but most would mate a ewe on heat at other times of year. Mating activity, as in ewes, is stimulated by declining daylight. Rams show a kind of “rut”, but nothing as obvious as seen in goats or deer.
  • Rams rarely stop to eat hence lose a lot of weight during the joining period.
  • Rams start to produce a strong aroma approaching mating and the bare skin around their eyes and on their underside around front legs and crutch turns pink. They are “in the pink”. For humans with sensitive noses the aroma is similar to a Billy goat but thankfully not as strong.
  • This smell comes from the grease in the wool and contains a pheromone that stimulates the ewes to ovulate and show oestrus.
  • Rams with high libido may not be fertile – it’s easy to assume they are if you see them enthusiastically courting ewes.
  • Courting behaviour is made up of a lot of “sniff hunting” ewes. Rams approach a ewe often from side, pawing her side with head low, rattling his tongue and giving a low bleating.

Ram 'sniff hunting' ewes. He has found a ewe on heat.
  • What most farmers do is to rely first on a veterinary check of the rams’ reproductive organs and then change them after each cycle to lessen the risk of any individual being infertile. The flock is mated alright, but you never know which rams were not fully functional and you may keep them – and their progeny which is always a concern incase the defect is inherited.
  • There is a big decline in the number of sperm/ejaculate in the mating period reaching the lowest levels 8 days after mating. But after the first cycle of 17 days when things quieten down a bit, the semen quality builds up again. The drop of in sperm number doesn’t seem to affect ewes getting pregnant.
  • It’s always wise to use an older experienced ram on young ewes, and a young ram on older experience ewes.
  • As rams are reared in homosexual groups, they may take time to learn how to mate females correctly. Find time to watch new rams working to make sure they are serving correctly into the vagina and ejaculating properly. In a good ejaculation the ram will thrust forward with all four feet off the ground.
Vet checking of rams
  • It’s very important to get your veterinarian to give all rams intended for use a physical examination well before joining with the ewes.
  • Sperm development takes 8 weeks so all the sperm present when the rams are joined have developed prior to mating. So it’s important to get the vet checks done at least two months before joining.
  • The newly purchased rams will, if anything, be overfat and lazy because they have been fed well for sale. They should have had a thorough vet check before sale.
  • Newly purchased rams should have come with a veterinary certificate to show they have been tested within 60 days of the sale and are free from Ovine Brucellosis.
  • If they are going out on to hill country they’ll need exercise training. Put them in a steep paddock near the dog kennels where they will get regular disturbance or make them move every time you pass them on foot or in a vehicle.
  • Some farmers put new rams in their driveway so every time a vehicle goes along (hopefully slowly) the rams are chased the full length and back again. Make sure the rams respect the cattle stop at the entrance or they’ll be gone!
  • For older rams resident on the property, they may need special checking as they are often neglected after mating and may have a range of health problems.
  • It is especially important to check any rams that will be used in single-sire mating mobs.
  • In a standing position check the ram’s testicles through his back legs.
  • The testicles should be large and hang close to the ground. They should not be tucked up near his body.
  • Big testicles denote large sperm producing capacity and a scrotum circumference of 30cm or greater is considered to be adequate.
  • The scrotum should feel smooth and silky and not look like crusty corduroy!
  • The testicles should feel loose in the scrotum and not have any adhesions to the scrotum wall.
  • Feel for a small lump at the very base of the testicle – that’s quite normal and it’s the epididymis or coiled tube for holding the sperm before they go up the vas deferens. The vas deferens is the tube the vet cuts or ligatures above the testicles when the ram is vasectomised. The epididymis should feel rubbery and not rock hard.
  • Never use a ram where the testicles feel small (and the epididymis feels a similar size) and is hard. This is bad news for the ram as you would be most unwise to give him a job!
  • Now turn the ram over on to his rump and check for old shearing cuts and wounds that may have been flyblown and not healed.
  • Check the prepuce or sheath the penis is in. It should not be swollen or exude pus from the end as this is probably “pizzle rot”.
  • Any urine stain or dirty wool around the end of the prepuce should be viewed with suspicion.
  • The “button” at the opening of the prepuce has some long hairs on it – don’t shear these off as they help urine to drain away.
  • With a little pressure at the rear of the prepuce, you should be able to protrude part of the ram’s penis. It has a slight bend but should not be any abnormal shape.
  • Don’t panic if you see what appears to be a worm coming out the point (the glans) on the end of the penis. This is normal and for some reason the ram is unique in having such a structure which is believed to help sperm get through the ewe’s cervix.
  • Check with your vet about the need for vaccinations against Brucellosis. All newly-purchased rams should have been treated.

Ram showing the 'flehmen' response after sniffing a ewe's urine

Libido and fertility

  • A fit ram is capable of completing at least 10 services in 8 hours and some can do 20 or more. The concern is usually about their fertility.
  • “Fertility” is the ram’s ability to produce viable sperm, and to measure it you need to check a sample of his semen. Only rams at AI centres are trained to serve into an artificial vagina (AV) so on the farm, a semen sample is obtained by electrical ejaculation. This is not always reliable as you only get a trickle out of the ram and not a good ejaculation as with an AV.
  • You can also check fertility by seeing how many ewes return to oestrus after the first 17 days of him joining the flock. But if he’s infertile, you will have lost time on lambing next year.
  • “Libido” is the ram’s sex drive. He may have plenty of it but be infertile, so the two may not go together.
  • Some ram breeders are doing “serving capacity tests” before they decide on how many ewes to give them. The test measures how many successful services the ram achieves in a given time – e.g. a ram confined in a pen with four oestrus ewes for 20 minutes should have at least two or more ejaculations.
  • This test has animal welfare implications so check with a veterinarian on the approved method. Remember also that the pen confinement may affect the ram’s behaviour.
  • If your newly-purchased ram has libido or fertility problems, contact the vendor or your vet, as you should be able to claim money back or get a replacement animal. Top breeders will always replace defective rams, but you will have lost time finding out and next year’s lambing will be delayed.
Mating ratios – how many ewes per ram?
  • Mating ratios have traditionally been 1 ram to 40-50 ewes, but this has probably grown with the belief that you had better have more rams than needed incase one is infertile. It’s still the standard advice today, and ram sellers don’t want to change it.
  • This is terribly wasteful of ram power as many trials have shown that a good fit ram is well able to mate 100 ewes, and some have mated up to 400 ewes where maximum coverage was needed without the need for Artificial Insemination (AI).
  • On large hill country blocks you have to watch out for rams that go away with a harem of ewes. The solution is to muster the sheep together at least once a day to make sure the ram or rams have contact with all the flock ewes.
  • So if you had chosen to put one ram to 100 or more ewes, it’s important to have good flat or rolling country so he could easily keep in contact with the flock to be mated and not have to search gullies or scrub for them.
  • Much depends on the health and fitness of the ram before the start of mating, and old shepherding lore says that rams must be “fit and not fat”.
  • Most fit rams are capable of at least 10 services in 8 hours and many are capable of 20 services.
  • A high-libido ram in the first days of joining always wants to give the ewe one more service, but generally after a couple of mounts and good ejaculations the ewe is less receptive for more, so the ram moves on to look for more business.
  • In well synchronised flocks you often see ewes queuing up for service in the first week of joining. In this situation a ewe may only get one service as her partner has been called away!
  • Ram lambs that are large enough (30-40kg) are usually given 30 ewes but if you are pushed, a lamb could mate 50 ewes over a couple of cycles.
  • Research has shown that differences in ram ratios do not affect the number of twins born.
How many rams in the mating mob
  • Having a surplus of rams in the flock may be a good insurance against infertility but they will spend more time fighting and establishing dominance and may miss ewes on heat. Fighting also leads to injuries which rarely recover before the end of mating, so an expensive ram can often be a write off.
  • In large mobs where many rams are used, the dominant rams do most of the mating, chasing the less-dominant away. Practice makes perfect, so these dominant rams, getting more practice, do the job quicker and so get more work.
  • However, many ewes end up being mated by more than one ram, and is often seen when mixed breeds of rams are used to find twins by different sire breeds. It has also been identified by DNA profiling.
  • This can have some benefits to overall flock fertility, especially if the semen quality of a dominant ram is declining due to over work. Studies showed that returns to service were 7-10% higher in single-sire mating mobs than where many rams were present to do the mating.
  • The subordinate ram may get a service when the dominant one has moved away to find more fresh ewes, or with ewes that have come to him and are waiting for mating.
  • Behaviour studies have shown that rams can be racists – in mixed-breed groups they often show a preference to mate ewes of their own breed. This was found in Merinos and black-faced breeds.
Research
Extensive research on mating ratios was done at the Invermay Research Centre by Dr Jock Allison in the 1970s.  This is reported in:
 Allison, A.J. (1975). Optimum  ram/ewe mating ratios. Proceedings of the Ruakura Farmers' Conference, 8-13.


The “ram effect”


  • Old shepherds always knew that the sight and smell of a ram stimulated ewes to cycle. Not surprisingly, modern researches have proved they were right and called it “the ram effect”.
  • The main reason to exploit it is to stimulate ewes to come on heat earlier than they may have done to try to get some early lambs, and to synchronise the flock to reduce the spread of lambing.
  • Prior to the breeding season, most ewes will ovulate but not show heat signs. This is a “silent heat” so she is never mated.
  • Joining rams prior to the start of these silent heats will stimulate ewes to ovulate within 3-6 days and show a proper oestrus 17 days later at which they can be mated.
  • So timing is critical. If the ram is joined too early there will be no “ram effect”, and if joined too late the only ewes affected will be those that have not yet had a silent heat.
  • To really exploit it, ewes are first isolated from sight, sound and smell of all rams for at least 2-3 weeks before joining.
  • Then both sexes are put in adjoining paddocks to view and smell each other through the fence. Then the ewes can smell the male “pheromones” which are in the wool grease of the ram when he starts to stink like a Billy goat. The more powerful the smell, the better the results should be.
  • After about 4 days the gate is opened between them for mating to start.
  • This practice is sometimes done using teaser (vasectomised) rams that are actually run with the ewes for even closer contact and actual serving.
  • Teasers seem to lose their libido over time and young entire rams can have more oestrous-stimulating power when kept next to ewes through the fence.
  • The other point is that it’s not always predictable what will happen as there are so many variables involved. Ewes must be in top body condition and so must the rams to get maximum benefit from the ram effect.
Shearing and dipping rams before joining with ewes
  • Newly purchased two-tooth rams will have quite a bit of wool on them for the buyer to assess, so they will need to be shorn before joining.
  • If you buy rams before Christmas (which is a good NZ practice), then shear them on arrival at your farm.
  • This will keep the ram cool during mating and the new wool will be long enough to keep a mating harness in place.
  • Shearing very close to joining is generally not recommended incase the shock affects fertility. This will not be very likely if the ram is in good condition.
  • Dipping rams before joining is definitely not recommended as it may have bad effect on semen quality. This is not a well-researched area, but it would be wise to be cautious and not dip for six weeks before mating.
Using ram mating harnesses
A mating harness can be used for three reasons:
  • To find out if a ram is working and which ewes he has served.
  • To sort the mated ewes into lambing mobs.
  • To identify barren ewes for early culling.
Old-time shepherds used to take a pot of raddle and a stick and put liberal amounts on the ram’s chest so when he mounted and served a ewe, a mark was left on her rump. This was a messy business that had to be done two or three times a week.

You had to catch the ram and wrestle him over to do the job properly, ending up covered in raddle. It was not surprising that after this indignity and the sight of the pot and stick, he became forever harder to catch!

Thankfully this all became unnecessary when the ram harness was invented. This fits around the ram’s girth behind the shoulders and holds a coloured crayon on his brisket to mark the ewe during each mount. He may leave a small mark after a false mount but usually after a good forward thrust and ejaculation, he’ll leave a good a strong crayon mark. Here are a few points about getting good results from the harness:
  • Make sure the harness is properly fitted on the ram and that neither it nor the crayon holder chafe his skin, especially under the front legs.
  • It has to be fitted tight to keep the crayon on his brisket.
  • Check it regularly.
  • Make sure you use crayons of the correct consistency. Hard crayons are for warmer conditions and soft ones for cold. Try some intermediate crayons if you are not sure, but check if the marks are clear.
  • Care of harnesses is important both during and after mating. They may stretch (especially leather ones) and need more holes punching in the straps.
  • Leather harnesses may need oiling which makes them very attractive to rats so good storage after mating is important.
  • Store synthetic webbing harnesses out of direct sunlight.
  • Using colours to separate lambing mobs
You can use two basic systems to do this:

Use one colour and draft off marked ewes.

  • This eliminates the need to keep changing crayons but it means more handling of ewes in the sheep yards.
  • At given intervals (e.g. 8 days which is half the cycle) draft off the marked ewes.
  • Run these ewes with a ram fitted with a different coloured crayon.
  • About 10-13% may return to service and those that don’t can be spot marked with a raddle on the head or back with an appropriate colour to denote the first lambing mob.
Change crayon colours


  • Catch the rams after each 8-day period and change their crayons.
  • A good colour sequence is:
  • Start– no colour or yellow
  • After first cycle – red or orange
  • After second cycle - purple or green
  • Third & fourth cycle - blue
Not using crayons will reduce contamination of the wool as hopefully most ewes will be pregnant soon after the ram is joined.

You can decide how many cycles you are going to accept before the ewe is considered as a cull. If not pregnant by two cycles, then she should be a candidate for culling unless there are extenuating circumstances e.g. an infertile ram.

All ewes with blue rumps are clear candidates for culling. The odd one may be pregnant but this is not worth worrying about as she will lamb so late.

What to do with the information?
If the harnesses have done the job they were designed for, then you will know which weeks the ewes will lamb in, which is very important information to plan feeding. The information is not perfect of course, so you will always be suspicious of ewes that are supposed to be in a later lambing round that are bagging up rapidly.

How long to keep a ram?
  • The answer to this question is straightforward – change rams before they come round to mating their own daughters.
  • So if you buy a two-tooth ram to mate ewes in autumn 2005, his daughters will be hoggets in autumn 2007 (if you wanted to mate them) and two-tooths in autumn 2008.
  • If you have high Index rams that you will clearly want to use over many flock ewes in future, then you’ll have to use single-sire mating to identify his progeny or use DNA profiling.
Rams for small flocks
  • Here the main problem is boredom for the ram. He mates all the ewes in the first cycle and then spends the next month at least sniff hunting them every time they move in the vain hope of some work.
  • It’s no wonder he breaks out into the neighbours or out the main gate and goes to town!
  • On too many small farms the quality of the rams used is dismal as they are viewed simply as something to get the ewes pregnant, and they have been bought for a give-away price at the late ram sales.
  • Lambs these days are worth big money and the best way to work out what to pay for a ram is to divide his cost by the number of lambs he will sire at say $70 each. So a rubbish ram at $30 is not a good buy.
  • Small farmers should consider cooperating in buying a good ram between them with some good performance records, and if convenient putting their ewes together for joining or giving the ram one cycle at each property. Late lambing ewes are not such a problem on small farms where they get more attention.
  • It’s not a good idea to keep a pet lamb as the flock ram as there have been some nasty accidents by them knocking over owners and their children at mating time.

Artificial insemination (AI)
  • In New Zealand, widespread commercial AI in sheep has not developed yet. It’s only been used by breeders with high-value rams and for “sire referencing. Here a group of breeders use the same ram at the same time as a “benchmark” sire, against which their own rams can be compared. This allows them to rank rams over different properties in a sire comparison or progeny test.
  • Commercial AI services only develop when the sires available are of such high in genetic merit that masses of farmers want them all at the same time. They are then prepared to pay the charges and also accept all the extra on-farm work which may include some technical training in semen handling and insemination technique which is more difficult that with cows.
Basic facts on sheep AI
  • The best quality semen for AI comes from rams that ejaculate into an artificial vagina (AV) and not from electroejaculation, so rams have to be trained to serve into an AV and this can require special skills.
  • This is why many farmers send their rams to commercial AI stations for semen collection and also for storage. From here they order what semen they want each day.
  • Normally 2-3 ejaculates are collected from a ram in a day.
  • This would give enough sperm in 0.1ml of semen to mate 50 ewes.
  • Because of all the extra work involved in AI, it’s a good idea to synchronise groups of ewes in the flock to come on heat together. This is done by treating them with intravaginal devices (IVDs) containing progestagen. The IVDs are left in for 12 days and after removal will come on heat 48 hours later.
  • All the ewes are inseminated - sometimes called “blanket insemination” or “fixed-time” insemination.
  • The other method which gives better results is called “on heat” insemination which means that a teaser ram is used to identify ewes on heat and they are brought in twice a day for insemination.
  • Ewes ovulate after the end of standing oestrus, but the problem is you don’t know when they start, and the exercise has to fit in with working hours.
  • When using a harnessed teaser ram to identify any on heat, bring in any ewes that were marked overnight and inseminate them that morning.
  • Then in late afternoon bring in any new ewes found on heat and inseminate them. It would be a good idea to give these late ones another insemination the next morning if the teaser was still interested in them. A further insemination 10-12 hours after her first insemination can increase fertility by 6-10%.
  • There are two methods of insemination. Ewes are inseminated either into the cervix (cervical insemination) or into the uterus (intra-uterine insemination). Only a veterinarian can carry out intra-uterine AI.
  • With cervical insemination an experienced operator can do 50-60 ewes/hour with fresh semen, and with intra-uterine, 25-35ewes/hour is a good work rate with frozen semen.
  • “Conception rate” (CR) after AI is normally lower than by natural service.
  • Good operators will guarantee 60% CR for intra-uterine and 50% for cervical AI.
  • Fresh semen must be used within 24 hours of collection for cervical insemination and frozen semen is only suitable for intra-uterine insemination.
  • Keeping stress to a minimum is important in an AI programme. By the time a ewe on heat has been mustered, yarded, drafted, restrained for insemination and then had a speculum inserted into her vagina to light up her cervix for insemination – she may be more than a bit stressed which may affect conception rate.
  • Clearly it would be most unwise to consider an AI programme in sheep without consulting your veterinarian and a professional AI service provider.