Abstract

In the course of an experiment designed to study the effects of calcium and phosphorus supplementation on the performance of Scottish Blackface hill ewes, with particular reference to the premature loss of permanent incisor teeth (Gunn, 1969), blood samples were taken from 40 ewes on ten occasions per year over a 4-year period. These were drawn equally from a control and three treatment groups. The control group followed the existing pattern of ewe management on the farm in question by utilizing improved pastures in the spring and early summer, and the treatment groups were a calcium dosed group (12 g calcium carbonate) and a phosphorus dosed group (13 g monosodium phosphate), both of which received the same management, and an undosed group run permanently on the hill. Details of the management and feeding are given in a previous paper (Gunn, 1969). It is sufficient to say here that mineral dosing took place three times per week between mid-February and the end of May and no minerals except salt were added to the concentrated ration fed to all groups at the rate of 10 oz (283 g)/head/day from mid-February to early May. Lambing commenced at about the end of the first week in April.

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