Production Information
Nutrients for Sheep

Successful sheep production requires a continual supply of clean, fresh water at a temperature that will optimize intake. Water has three important roles in the sheep’s body: (1) to serve as a coolant; (2) to transport nutrients and wastes; and (3) to provide a medium for chemical reactions. Read the rest of this entry »
Nutrition

The National Research Council has reviewed published research results and production experiences from scientists throughout the world to establish the nutrient requirements for different physiological stages and levels of production of sheep. These studies and experiences represent our current knowledge of needs for specific nutrients, such as energy, protein, minerals, and vitamins, to meet clearly defined production objectives. The goal of this chapter is to discuss how to most efficiently and economically meet the needs of specific production functions with available nutrient resources in various ecosystems in which sheep production is a viable enterprise.
The initial sections of this chapter will address digestive physiology, nutrient requirements for different physiological stages of production, and nutrient composition of feedstuffs. The remainder will relate how these principles may be applied to specific production systems. The challenge to the sheep producer is to clearly understand the nutrient resources available and how these may or may not meet the needs of their sheep production system.
If sheep are to compete for land, labor, and other resources, they must be able to efficiently convert feedstuffs into products of economic value (i.e., meat, wool, and milk). The economics of the production system for any livestock enterprise is, in part, a function of the efficiency of conversion of inputs into salable products. Then, the availability, market demand, or economic value of these products will determine profitability. Available feed resources may dictate production levels of these end products. For example, baseline production levels are a function of the ability of sheep to harvest forages from rangelands or pasture to support reproduction, lamb growth, and wool production. The producers’ options to increase production above baseline levels are determined by the costs of increased nutritional and management inputs relative to increases in returns from the expected higher outputs.
The majority of the world’s sheep are located in arid to semi-arid ecosystems, such as the southwestern and western rangelands in the United States. In these environments, seasonal fluctuation in nutrient availability may limit reproduction and lamb growth. Wool production is generally more important than lamb production in these limited feed resource environments. If higher quality nutrient resources are available, as with improved pastures and lower cost concentrate supplements, the systems should support higher levels of reproduction, lamb growth, and wool production.
A student of sheep production systems in the United States and throughout the world must be impressed with two observations: (1) the diversity of ecosystems and production systems in which sheep can profitably function; and (2) the diversity of genetic resources, or breeds of sheep, that have evolved to function in these diverse ecosystems. Adaptability to the environment in which the animal is expected to produce is probably the most important genetic characteristic required for economical sheep production. The breed selected must be able to thrive, reproduce, and yield salable products within the limits of the environment. This is the reason for the hardy Merino and Rambouillet breeds being the foundation stock in range production systems. On the other hand, the genetic potential for reproduction that has evolved in the adapted range Merino and Rambouillet ewes may become a limiting factor in higher input/output production systems. If resources are less limited, increased reproductive rate to maximize resource use should be a higher priority than in more limited resource environments.
Profitability must be the primary determinant in sheep-production decisions. Because almost 60 percent of the cost per pound of lamb produced is feed cost, nutritional-management decisions are critical to enterprise profitability and sustainability. The producer must have a clear understanding of sheep-nutrient needs at various stages of the production cycle, of the nutritive value of available forage and feed resources, and of management techniques to produce a consumer-preferred product at the least cost.
Management Information

Explosion and Biotechnology Advances in information collection and dissemination and in the biosciences will succeed the mechanical and chemical revolution of the past 70 years as the keys to profit and quality of life. The biotechnology revolution will reshape agriculture Ñ affecting livestock and crop genetics, tillage systems, crop protection, individual human health, and more. Read the rest of this entry »
Management Objectives

Strategic Management, an Agricultural and Sheep Industry Assessment, Powerful, persuasive forces are propelling the agricultural industry toward a new dimension for the 21st century. The changes to be experienced now and into the next century are due to the emergence of two forces: revolutionary scientific developments and social and political activism. These forces will affect people in all occupations, and they are bringing fundamental changes to the world economy as well.
The number one best seller, Mega Trends by John Naisbitt (published in the early 1980s), has been an influential source in strategic planning and marketing. It is a book that allows one to step back and examine the big picture, the issues that are shaping business and society. These national and global changes Ñ or mega trends Ñ are occurring in agriculture, and professionals who want to prosper Ñ whether they’re agricultural lenders, producers, or people in agribusinesses Ñ must capitalize on them.
Today, fewer people are engaged in agriculture than when the United States was largely an agrarian nation, but agriculture and food distribution still employ almost 20 percent of the work force. Agriculture generates approximately 17 percent of the GNP and is projected to generate an even higher percentage in the 21st century as productivity increases.
Most recently, the information explosion (made possible by satellites, computers, etc.) has been contributing to the increase in productivity, and as we near the 21st century, biotechnology is poised to become a powerful force.
With these two broad trends experts forecast the following changes in North America:
- increased productivity;
- fewer farms and support services;
- consolidated productivity into more concentrated segments;
- an accelerated shift from hand power toward mind power.
Although these mega trends are having a significant impact on agricultural producers and their support services, agriculture is ready for a new dimension. Opportunity and growth lie ahead for those who will think unconventionally, yet utilize the wisdom and experiences of past generations.
Multispecies Grazing

Multispecies grazing is an excellent management tool to distribute grazing pressure, maintain or improve plant diversity and diet quality, reduce the likelihood and effects of noxious plants, and spread economic risk. Although it is a misconception that diets of different animal species do not overlap, the potential benefits of distinct selection tendencies of the ruminant species are often underestimated. Cattle are classified as “bulk grazers,” usually preferring grasses to other plant types and, because of a relatively long ruminal retention time, can utilize high-fiber diets. Cattle tend to be somewhat nonselective and graze for quantity rather than quality. However, cattle avoid certain plants which, as a result, gain a competitive advantage and over time increase as a percentage of the available vegetation. Small ruminants, especially goats and deer, are more selective for quality and tend to prefer foliage and mast of shrubs and trees, many of which are avoided by cattle. Sheep are somewhat intermediate to these extremes but strongly prefer short, tender forbs and grass regrowth. Read the rest of this entry »
Forages

A variety of rangeland, pasture, and forage crop management practices can optimize forage production and utilization while meeting the nutrient needs of the grazing sheep. Sheep are herbivores, and their ability to efficiently convert forages from rangelands and pastures into useful products has defined their ecological and economic niches. The fact that sheep are selective grazers largely determines the type of forages they consume; it may also define how they can best be used in appropriate land management systems. Read the rest of this entry »
Breeding

Sheep are thought to have been domesticated approximately 10,000 to 12,000 years ago and, along with the goat and dog, are considered to be among the first animals to be domesticated by man. The major changes in sheep since domestication have been genetic ones to make this animal more useful to man. Increased production may be achieved through alteration of the sheep’s environment, but such changes must be repeated daily, seasonally, or at least annually, whereas genetic change tends to be permanent. Through genetic improvements, the sheep has been changed from one with a hairy coat to one with the potential to produce up to 10 pounds of clean fine wool annually; from a sheep that produces one lamb per year to one with the potential to produce multiple births more than one time per year. These changes, though substantial, have occurred over thousands of years Ñ a time scale clearly unacceptable in the present age. Read the rest of this entry »
Monthly Management Tips

Depending upon when one lambs, breeding of the flock is either well underway or will start in the near future. Hopefully, producers have done or will do a thorough job of preparing the ewes and rams for a successful breeding season. Some management practices that can increase flock performance and make the future lambing season more successful include: Read the rest of this entry »