4 results on '"Gordon Refshauge"'
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2. The effect of perennial and annual wheat forages, fed with or without lucerne, on the fatty acid profile and oxidative status of lamb meat
- Author
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Benjamin W.B. Holman, Stephanie M. Fowler, Gordon Refshauge, Richard C. Hayes, Matthew T. Newell, Edward H. Clayton, Kristy L. Bailes, and David L. Hopkins
- Subjects
Sheep meat ,General Veterinary ,Topside ,Alfalfa ,Veterinary medicine ,Loin ,TBARS ,food and beverages ,Article ,Fatty acid profile ,SF600-1100 ,Grazing cereals ,Vitamin E ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
The current study investigated the fatty acid profile and oxidative status of the meat from lambs that were fed a novel perennial wheat or a conventional annual wheat, either as a cereal monoculture or lucerne biculture. Twelve lambs were assigned to each of the four dietary treatments (48 lambs in total) and held within individual pens for the duration of the 28 day feeding study. Lambs were slaughtered and the longissimus lumborum (LL) and semimembranosus (SM) muscles analysed. The independent effect of wheat type on fatty acid concentrations was negligible. The concentration of long-chain saturated and omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids was higher when lucerne was included in the diet. Only monounsaturated fatty acids were affected by the interaction between wheat type and lucerne. The three-way interaction between wheat type, lucerne and muscle was only significant for the concentration of C12:0 and anteiso-C15:0. The concentration of thiobarbituric reactive substances and vitamin E was higher in meat from lambs fed a lucerne biculture, compared with those fed a cereal monoculture. Furthermore, and independent to dietary treatment, higher concentration of omega-3, omega-6 and other health claimable fatty acids were found in the SM, compared with the LL. This information will support industry adoption of novel perennial wheat polycultures and help producers to utilise it as a dual-purpose crop for the production of grain and/or sheep meat.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A review of dystocia in sheep
- Author
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David W. Miller, Gordon Refshauge, Amy Lockwood, David G. Masters, Paul R. Kenyon, Caroline Jacobson, and Mieghan Bruce
- Subjects
040301 veterinary sciences ,Uterine Inertia ,Domestic sheep reproduction ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Physiology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Disease ,Heritability ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Birth injury ,Breed ,0403 veterinary science ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hypocalcaemia ,Flock ,reproductive and urinary physiology - Abstract
This review aims to describe the nutritional and non-nutritional factors that may affect parturition and dystocia in sheep. Dystocia is associated with fetopelvic disproportion, uterine inertia, failure of the cervix to fully dilate, malpresentation and disease or congenital defects in lambs. Dystocia can result in lambs that are born dead, or lambs that survive parturition but sustain birth injury including central nervous system damage. Dystocia risk is increased with high or low birthweight lambs, high (fat) or low liveweight ewes, and small first parity ewes. Other factors implicated include low muscle glycogen, pregnancy toxaemia, mineral imbalance causing hypocalcaemia, and a lack of antioxidant nutrients. Addressing these risks requires differential nutritional management for single and multiple bearing ewes. There is also evidence for stress and environmentally related dystocia. The stress related hormones cortisol, adrenaline and ACTH play a major role in the initiation and control of parturition in the sheep indicating a need for adequate supervision during lambing, provision of adequate feed and shelter at the lambing site, and small flock size to reduce physical and environmental stress. Hormonal control of parturition can be further disrupted by xenoestrogens or phytoestrogens in clovers and medics. Oestrogenic plants are still widely grown in mixed pastures but should be not be grazed by pregnant ewes. There is clearly a genetic component to dystocia. This is partly explained by incompatibility in physical size and dimensions of the ram, ewe and lamb. A rapid reduction in dystocia through direct genetic selection is problematic with low heritability of dystocia and some of its indicator traits such as lambing ease. This review provides broad interpretation of the literature, but conclusions are not definitive with widespread inconsistency in reported results. Further research is required to investigate dystocia under commercial production conditions, and this should be complemented by focussed studies under controlled conditions. Priorities include defining the fitness of the ewe to lamb, the role of stress and environment on parturition and the use of indicator traits to select for ease of birth.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The effect of a perennial wheat and lucerne biculture diet on feed intake, growth rate and carcass characteristics of Australian lambs
- Author
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Richard Hayes, Benjamin W.B. Holman, Gordon Refshauge, Alexandra R. Shanley, Matthew T. Newell, and David L. Hopkins
- Subjects
Perennial plant ,040301 veterinary sciences ,animal diseases ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,Forage ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,040201 dairy & animal science ,0403 veterinary science ,Animal science ,Food Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Growth rate ,Longissimus Lumborum - Abstract
A pen feeding study was conducted using 10 month old Poll Dorset × Merino ewe lambs to test the effect of perennial wheat forage on growth rates and carcass characteristics in comparison to annual wheat forage. Individual lambs (n = 48) were fed one of four diets, namely perennial wheat (PW), annual wheat (W), perennial wheat + lucerne (alfalfa) (PW + L) or annual wheat + lucerne (W + L). Lambs were monitored for 28 days during which daily forage quality, forage mineral content, feed intake and weekly liveweight change were recorded. At the completion of the feeding period all lambs were slaughtered in a commercial abattoir. At 24 h post-slaughter the left hand side longissimus lumborum muscle (LL) was removed and assessed for quality attributes. Feed intake increased over the 28 days with W fed lambs eating a greater amount compared to PW fed lambs. The addition of lucerne to the cereal forage (PW + L and W + L) increased feed intake (P
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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