fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 11 November 2022 08:55

Study identifies ewe wastage

Written by  Staff Reporters
The study found that, on average, six out of 100 ewes died or went missing between mating and weaning. The study found that, on average, six out of 100 ewes died or went missing between mating and weaning.

Preliminary results on a ewe wastage study has found that, on average, 30 out of every 100 ewes left their flocks between mating and post-weaning.

Reasons for culling included failure to get pregnant, rear a lamb, age, teeth, udder defects and body condition. However, on average, six out of 100 ewes died or went missing between mating and weaning.

The study – carried out on 37 sheep farms across New Zealand last year – also found that on average 13 % of ewes presented to the ram failed to rear a lamb and when combined with scanning data. This means an estimated 24 potential lambs were lost per 100 ewes.

The report, written by Massey University associate professor Anne Ridler, states that this will be an underestimate of potential lambs lost, as it does not take into account lambs that died whose mother still reared a lamb.

The study, which is a collaboration between researchers at Massey University and Lincoln University and funded by the Massey – Lincoln and Agricultural Industry Trust.

It aims to describe ewe wastage on a sample of New Zealand sheep farms. These farms comprise a range of sizes, topography and climate types.

Nineteen of the study farms are in the North Island and 18 in the South Island. The average size of the flocks studied was 4,721 ewes (twotooths and mixed-age) but ranged from 920 to 17,461.

In autumn 2021, all participating farmers were interviewed about their ewe culling decisions and while all farmers culled dry ewes, there was a big variation in culling decisions around wet/dry two-tooth ewes, culling on type or looks or age.

Most farmers culled ewes with poor udders and some or all ewes with poor feet, but there was a range of methods used to access udders and feet.

The study calculated wastage as a percentage of the ewes that were put to the ram in 2021 compared to the number of ewes that failed to rear a lamb to tailing (docking). It takes into account dry ewes, wet-dry ewes, ewes that were culled for other reasons and ewes that died or went missing.

However, the research also looks at reasons for culling at weaning or post-weaning and this was when farmers culled on age, teeth, body condition and udder defects.

The attrition rate of 30 per 100 ewes, which requires a replacement rate of around 30% to keep flock numbers stable, aligns with replacement rates on most of the farms in the study.

These ranged from 19.3% to 44.9% with an average of just under 30%. Further analysis of the results is being done and work into ewe wastage is ongoing.

Beef + Lamb New Zealand’s general manager farming excellence, Dan Brier says the sheep and beef levy organisation supports the study because it is such important work.

“Ewe flocks are such an important driver of profitability on sheep and beef farms.”

He says the study highlights the huge variation in how farmers make decisions about which sheep to cull.

“B+LNZ has a number of tools to help farmers with their culling decisions,” Brier adds. “I’d encourage them to look at the video and resources that Dr Ridler has produced for us on udder health in sheep.”

More like this

Farmers Lead Sustainability Push: Woodchip bioreactor cuts nitrate runoff in Manawatu

Claims that farmers are polluters of waterways and aquifers and 'don't care' still ring out from environmental groups and individuals. The phrase 'dirty dairying' continues to surface from time to time. But as reporter Peter Burke points out, quite the opposite is the case. He says, quietly and behind the scenes, farmers are embracing new ideas and technologies to make their farms sustainable, resilient, environmentally friendly and profitable.

Massey study tests impact of solar panels on grass growth

Many farmers have invested in solar energy for dairy sheds or houses, but little hard data exists on the viability of solar panels in open paddocks or the loss of drymatter this may cause. Massey University scientist Dr Sam Wilson is conducting research to get more information about this. Rural News reporter Peter Burke went to investigate.

From Nelson to Dairy Research: Amy Toughey’s Journey

Driven by a lifelong passion for animals, Amy Toughey's journey from juggling three jobs with full-time study to working on cutting-edge dairy research trials shows what happens when hard work meets opportunity - and she's only just getting started.

Featured

$2b boost in NZ exports to EU

New Zealand’s trade with the European Union has jumped $2 billion since a free trade deal entered into force in May last year.

US tariffs hit European ag machinery markets

The climate of uncertainty and market fragmentation that currently characterises the global economy suggests that many of the European agricultural machinery manufacturers will be looking for new markets.

Tributes paid to Jim Bolger

Dignitaries from  all walks of life – the governor general,  politicians past and present, Maoridom- including the Maori Queen, church leaders, the primary sector and family and  friends packed Our Lady of Kapiti’s Catholic church in Paraparaumu on Thursday October 23 to pay tribute to former prime Minister, Jim Bolger who died last week.

National

Machinery & Products