Abstract

Simple SummaryEwe wastage is the combination of on-farm mortality and premature culling. Increased wastage results in a reduction in flock productivity and profitability, yet internationally, there is limited research on actual wastage incidence and causes in commercial flocks. This study reports both lifetime wastage and detailed annual wastage for 13,142 ewes from four cohorts on three commercial New Zealand farms. This study also describes the relationship between ewe pre-mating body condition score and wastage. Of the 13,142 enrolled ewes, 50.4% and 40.0% exited their respective flocks due to premature culling and on-farm dead/missing, respectively. Annual mortality incidence ranged from 3.5 to 40.2%. Wastage as a hogget was identified as an area in which improvements can be made to reduce overall wastage. Pre-mating body condition score was a predictor of wastage, with ewes with greater pre-mating body condition score having lower odds of wastage due to both premature culling and mortality. Therefore, farmers should focus on improving the body condition score of their ewes prior to breeding.Ewe wastage is the combination of on-farm mortality and premature culling. Internationally, there is limited research on actual wastage incidence and causes in commercial sheep flocks. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that reports both lifetime wastage and detailed annual wastage in a sample of commercial New Zealand flocks. This study utilized data collected from 13,142 ewes from four cohorts on three commercial New Zealand farms (Farm A 2010-born, Farm A 2011-born, Farm B, Farm C), during the period 2011–2017, as they aged from replacement hoggets to 6-year-old ewes (Farm A and Farm B) or 3-year-old ewes (Farm C). Data collection visits occurred at three or four key management times each year, namely pre-mating, pregnancy diagnosis, pre-lambing and weaning. At each visit, body condition score (BCS) was assessed and any ewes that were culled or had died on farm were recorded. As this was a lifetime study, each ewe was assigned an outcome and corresponding ‘exit age’. By the end of the study, all ewes that had exited their respective flocks, were classified as either prematurely culled, or dead/missing, or if still in the flock, as censored, and either the exact date or interval in which they exited the flock was recorded. Semi-parametric competing risk (premature culling vs. dead/missing), interval-censored survival models were developed to: 1. describe the association between hogget reproductive outcomes and risk of subsequent wastage, and 2. assess pre-mating BCS as a predictor of wastage in that production year. Of the 13,142 enrolled ewes, 50.4% exited their respective flocks due to premature culling and 40.0% due to on-farm dead/missing, giving a total of 90.4% that exited due to wastage. Annual mortality incidence ranged from 3.5 to 40.2%. As a hogget, wastage incidence ranged from 7.6 to 45.4%. Pregnancy or rearing a lamb as a hogget did not increase risk of subsequent wastage. In all years, pre-mating BCS was a predictor of ewe wastage, with odds of wastage lower with increasing BCS. Therefore, farmers should focus on improving pre-mating BCS to 3.5/5.0 by assessing ewe BCS at weaning, allowing poorer-BCS ewes to be managed to gain BCS before re-breeding.

Highlights

  • Productive longevity is the ability of a ewe to survive and be productive until she is culled for age

  • The present study utilized data collected from 13,142 ewes during the period 2011–2017, as the ewes aged from replacement hoggets (7–8 months old) to 6-year-old ewes

  • Of the 13,142 ewes enrolled in this study, 50.4% (n = 6629) exited their respective flocks due to premature culling, 40.0% (n = 5253) due to on-farm dead/missing, while only 5.1%

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Summary

Introduction

Productive longevity is the ability of a ewe to survive and be productive until she is culled for age. In New Zealand commercial flocks, the age at which ewes are culled for age varies between farms, but is typically approximately six to seven years of age [1], similar to flocks internationally [2,3]. Ewe wastage is defined as the combination of both on-farm mortality and premature culling [4]. Increased ewe wastage results in a reduction in farm productivity and subsequent ability to generate profit [1,4]. There is limited research on actual wastage rates and causes in commercial ewe flocks in New Zealand [1] and internationally [2,5,6]. Flocks that have higher ewe wastage rates require an increased proportion of replacement hoggets

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