Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2458628 | Small Ruminant Research | 2006 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
This study investigated whether exposure of ewes to locoweed (Oxytropis sericea; Leguminosae) during gestation would affect ewe behaviour during parturition, ewe-lamb bonding and related behaviours postpartum, and maternal responsiveness of ewes to alien and own lambs. Twenty-nine nulliparous Columbia-Targhee ewes bearing a single fetus were divided into two feeding treatments: (1) locoweed (L, n = 15), fed as a 10% locoweed pellet at 3 kg/day from day 100 to 130 of gestation, or (2) controls (C, n = 14) fed 3 kg/day of alfalfa hay. Lamb birth weights were reduced about 25% (P < 0.001) from maternal locoweed ingestion. There was a distinct lack of maternal-infant bonding due to locoweed intoxication of lambs. Only 1 lamb born to L ewes was able to nurse without assistance within 120 min. Lambs born to L ewes took longer to stand (P < 0.05), to initiate teat-seeking behaviour (P < 0.03), and to suckle (P < 0.0007). The behavioural toxicosis did not persist in lambs, as behavioural anomalies largely disappeared within 10 days following parturition. Locoweed-intoxicated ewes in general had an increased propensity (P < 0.1) for locomotor activity, notably during fetal expulsion, and longer fetal expulsion times (P < 0.1). There were few behavioural differences induced by locoweed up to 30 min postpartum, when L ewes became inattentive to lambs (P < 0.1). After the first (human assisted) suckling bout, L ewes were attentive toward both their own and alien lambs. Both L and C dams were equally aggressive toward alien lambs. These results indicate that lamb survival after maternal locoweed exposure will depend greatly on human intervention. If locoweed-exposed lambs survive the first 24-48 h after birth, then the prognosis for survival improves greatly.
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Authors
J.A. Pfister, J.B. Astorga, K.E. Panter, B.L. Stegelmeier, R.J. Molyneux,