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Indices for cashmere fleece competition and across farm comparisons: The role of staple length in identifying goats of higher cashmere production

Authors :
Bruce McGregor
Kym L. Butler
Source :
Small Ruminant Research. 121:131-135
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

A single focus on mean fibre diameter (MFD, μm) as the definition of cashmere quality overlooks the effects of fibre length, softness and fibre curvature on cashmere processing, textile quality and consumer acceptance. Many farmers overlook the importance of cashmere staple length (SL, cm) in their fleece assessments. We aimed to determine the importance of SL in comparison with MFD when evaluating cashmere production and to identify how across farm comparisons of cashmere fleeces can be objectively undertaken. A sample of 1244 commercial cashmere fleeces from goats originating from many Australian farms was used. Least squares models, relating the logarithm of clean cashmere production (CCMwt, g) to MFD and SL, were fitted. Six years of data from the Australian cashmere industry between farm fleece competitions were analysed to determine the relation between CCMwt and MFD. In the research flocks, adjusting CCMwt of individual goats across farms for MFD only accounted for 2% of the variance, whereas SL accounted for 39% of the variance. The least squares additive model involving only SL was: log 10 (CCMwt) = 1.570 + 0.06010 × SL. Thus CCMwt was proportional to: 10 0.06010 × SL = 1.1484 SL . It was appropriate to adjust CCMwt for SL by a factor 1/1.1484 (SL − SL0) where SL0 is a standard SL of 7.5 cm. The between farm index for cashmere weight equals: clean cashmere staple length index = 2.823 × CCMwt/1.1484 SL . For industry fleece competitions, regression analysis indicated that there was no association between cashmere production and MFD ( P = 0.81), similar to the research data. Adjusting CCMwt for MFD in across farm comparison and fleece competitions appears to be ineffective. For farm comparisons and in fleece competitions it is important to assess cashmere SL. The use of the Clean Cashmere Staple Length Index will provide a more robust comparison of cashmere productivity between farms as it is an indirect indicator of desirable skin secondary follicle development. The results have application in development projects where obtaining a cashmere MFD test is costly or unavailable.

Details

ISSN :
09214488
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Small Ruminant Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f4a00768139ee57b38575aee359d0a8a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smallrumres.2013.11.011