SHEEP FEEDING 
        Sheep 
           
          Grazing – better  thrive -on stubble after harvest  
          1. Highly resistant-  water deprivation. 
          2. Bifid upper lip. 
          3. Consideration for  fleece. 
        Flushing  
           
        Improving the nutritional status  of ewes during 3-4 weeks prior to mating is known as ‘flushing’.  Nutrition and body condition of the ewes  prior to putting them to ram are important.   Flushing will have effect only if the  ewes were in declining phase of nutritional availability.  Ewes in better body condition will produce  more lambs and thus the flushing of leaner ewes will increase the fertility by  way of increased incidence of oestrus and increased ovulation rate.  To obtain increased lambing rate, the  breeding ewes, 4-6 weeks prior to their being bred, should be supplemented with  250g of concentrate mixture or 500 g of good quality legume hay per head per  day. 
          
          Sheep Feeding 
             
         
        Pregnant Ewes 
           
          The foetus makes two-thirds of its  total growth during the last 6 weeks of pregnancy.  The consequences of under-nutrition in late  pregnancy are reduction in lamb’s birth weight, poor milk production and poor  lamb survival.  Under-nutrition may also  result in occurrence of pregnancy toxaemia which results in collapse and  possible death of the ewes.  There is  production of ketone and acetone bodies in the blood from the rapid breakdown  of body fat to meet the energy requirements of advanced pregnancy.  Thus, the amount of nutrients, especially  energy, must be increased during the later part of pregnancy to ensure proper  growth of foetus and high milk production. 
           
  Lactating Ewes 
   
  The requirements of energy and  protein are higher during lactation. During early lactation sufficient quantity  of good quality grazing and supplementary concentrate or legume hay or dry tree  leaves should be provided as the demand for energy in lactation is very  high.  The lactation ewes require concentrate  supplementation on even higher rate than the advanced pregnancy.  Lactation also causes to mobilize body  reserves of fat which is replaced with water. They should also be fed a high  level of energy in early lactation.   
  A high protein diet improves the yield of milk but at the cost of the body  reserves and hence both energy and protein should be balanced in the diet of  lactation sheep. 
          
            Lactating Ewes 
           
         
        Lambs 
           
          A lamb should get sufficient amount  of colostrums (first milk) from the  mother during the first few days after birth.   It imparts passive immunity, through gamma-globulins in which colostrums  is very rich, against a number of infectious diseases against which the mother  has been vaccinated or to which it has more recently been exposed to.  There is no other way of protecting young  lambs against these infectious diseases as they do not have their own immune  system yet developed.  Colostrum is also a rich source of energy  and nourishes the newborn lamb, and acts as a laxative to clear the gut of the  muconium.  Colostrum is richer than  milk in protein, vitamins A and D, cobalt, iron and lactose.  If some lambs are orphaned and no ewes are  available for fostering, it is necessary to rear them artificially.  It will require some personal attention and  training the lambs to suckle goats.   Artificial feeding of milk using glass bottles with rubber nipples can  be adopted, but hygienic measures must be adhered to.  Lambs should be started on creep feed as soon  as possible after birth.  The consumption  is negligible during first 2-3 weeks but will increase with age and  weight.  The creep ration (feed for young ones) should be highly palatable and  rich in protein.  Feeding of weaned  lambs involves a balance between the use of cereals and the forages rich in  energy and protein to achieve economic growth.   The fattening lambs should fed special rations high in energy and  protein and low in fibre. Lambs achieve satisfactory growth rate at a  dry-matter intake level of 4 to 5 per cent of body weight 
          
          Feeding of Lamb  
        Fattening Lambs 
           
        The sheep meat available in the  Indian markets comes either from old and culled sheep or from male lambs  slaughtered any time between 6 months and 1 year of age.  The quality and quantity of the meat produced  from the male lambs is very poor due to poor market weight, low dressing  percentage and narrow bone: meat ratio, since these lambs are maintained on  scrub grazing like their dams.  They  hardly attain a body weight of 15-16 kg at the age of 8-9 months when they are  usually marketed.  The dressing  percentage varies from 35 to 40 and bone: meat ratio from 1:4 to 1:4:25.  Through crossbreeding of native sheep with  exotic mutton breeds and extensive feeding of lambs marked improvement can be  achieved both in live-weight gains and carcass quality. 
        FEED NUTRIENTS AND WATER  REQUIREMENTS 
        The basic  nutrients required by sheep are energy, protein, minerals and water. 
           
          Water 
           
          Water, though not considered a  nutrient, is essential for proper functioning of the body as it is more vital  for the maintenance of the animal life than any other feed component.  It is the main constituent of all body  tissues and helps in the excretion of waste products through faeces and  urine.  The body water plays and  important role in the animal’s thermoregulatory mechanism.  Most of the water requirement is usually  satisfied by the water in the feed when green feed is available.  Water intake in highly correlated with both  air temperature and absolute humidity.   Water requirement increases during growth, gestation, lactation and heat  stress when salt content of the diet is more, or when animals are made to  travel long distances.  On dry feed, an  adult sheep requires about 2 liters of water per day during winter and 3.5-4  litres during summer.  Normally a sheep  will drink approximately 2-3 litres of water for every 1 kg of dry, feed  consumed.  Sheep in desert areas can  stand water deprivation up to 3 days.   Watering free choice on alternative days has no deleterious effect.  Sheep can tolerate salt content up to 1 per  cent in the drinking water. 
   
  ENERGY 
   
  The soluble carbohydrates, fibre,  fats and oils are the sources of energy.   Such energy is used to produce heat to keep the body warm and to keep it  cool through evapo-transpiration, and provide energy for physical activities  and other life processes.  The  carbohydrates are also required for the growth and development of rumen  micro-organisms.  In their body weight  both under stall feeding and grazing conditions.  Lambs achieve satisfactory growth rate at a  dry-matter intake level of 4 to 5 per cent of body weight.  Different systems are in vogue all over the  world to express the energy requirements.   In India  the digestible nutrients (TDN) system is in practice.  In recent times metabolizable energy (ME)  system is also being followed.  The TDN  requirement of lambs is higher than that of adult sheep.  Similarly the pregnant, lactating and  breeding ewes require more energy than the non-pregnant, non-lactating  ones.  As a thumb rule a non-pregnant,  non-lactating ewe requires 10 g of TDN per kg live weight for maintenance and  wool production.  This requirement would  be about 50 per cent more during last 6 weeks of pregnancy and 100 per cent  more during the first 10 weeks of lactation.   The energy deficiency may result in reproductive failure, poor growth  and loss in body weight and may ultimately lead to death.  The  dry matter should contain about 50-55 per cent TDN for adults and 60-65 per  cent TDN for growing lambs. 
   
  PROTEIN 
   
  Protein is the basic structural  material of all the body tissues and is constantly required for the  regeneration of all the living tissues which are undergoing constant wear and  tear.  The breeding animals need protein  for prenatal growth, development of the foetus and to produce milk for  post-natal growth of young ones.  Clean  soured wool or keratin is almost a pure protein.  If the ration does not contain enough energy,  the protein will be used as energy source.   But protein cannot be replaced by any other nutrient in the ration.  Protein deficiency causes reduced feed intake  and poor feed efficiency.  This would  result in poor growth and development of muscle, reduced reproductive  efficiency and wool production.  The  protein-deficient animals have lower disease resistance due to smaller amount  of immune protein. 
        MINERALS  
           
        Minerals are required for the  building and maintenance of the skeleton and teeth.  They play an important role in digestion, in  the maintenance of osmotic pressure in different body fluids and wool  growth.  Deficiency of any mineral will  exhibit clinical symptoms.  The role of  the minerals in sheep nutrition is complicated.   Excess of some of them may result in poor feed intake, digestion and  utilization of other minerals, and can even cause toxicity.  The common mineral deficiency symptoms are  anorexia (reduced appetite), reduced gain or loss in body weight, unthriftiness,  abnormal hair or wool coat and skin dullness, bone deformation, staggered gait  and organ damage.  Calcium and phosphorus  are necessary for bone formation and its maintenance.  Deficiencies or imbalance of these minerals  are indicted by rickets in young ones and osteoporosis in adults.  Deficiency of copper and cobalt may result in  tetany and doggy wool.  Selenium deficiency may lead to ‘white  muscle’ disease in lambs.  Sulphur is present in  wool and hair and its deficiency will lead to poor wool production and  quality.  Inadequate supply of iron,  copper and cobalt results in anaemia, and lack of iodine in goiter. 
        VITAMINS  
           
        Vitamins are metabolically  essential.  In sheep some vitamins are  synthesized in their tissues and some by micro-organisms in their  gastro-intestinal tract.  The symptoms of  vitamin deficiencies are anorexia, reduced growth, dermatitis, weakness and  staggering gait.  In sheep vitamin A is  more important and its deficiency can cause various kinds of blindness.  Vitamin deficiency also leads to abnormal  bone development, weak and still-born lambs and respiratory problems.      
      (Source: Dr. Clemend, Central Farm. TNAU)        |