Abstract

SUMMARYSeven daily doses of 60 or 120 mg cortisol administered to mature sheep given a maintenance ration depressed wool fibre diameter by approximately 10%. Similar treatment with 120 mg cortisol for 14 days produced a more severe and prolonged effect, though fibre diameter was unaffected by a series of seven injections of 40 IU ACTH given every second day.Fourteen days at 10% of maintenance and 14 days' cortisol treatment were applied to mature sheep fed either continually at 150% maintenance, or at 75% followed by 150% maintenance. Cortisol treatment was associated with a significant reduction in fibre diameter only in the animals fed at 150% maintenance. Restriction to 10% maintenance for 14 days had no such effect. Approximately 20% of fibres were shed following cortisol treatment in both nutritional groups, but a marked ‘break’ in the fleece occurred only in the 75% maintenance group.A low plane of nutrition is confirmed as a major factor predisposing to ‘tenderness’ and ‘break’, and short-term adrenocortical stimulation is shown to be sufficient to produce the reduction in fibre diameter and increased fibre shedding associated with these faults. However, semi-starvation (represented by restriction to 10% of maintenance) appears to have played a relatively minor role in their development.

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