ISSN:
1365-2494
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
Notes:
The grazing behaviour by sheep, after the loss of the temporary incisors and before their replacement with the permanent incisors, was compared with that after the first pair of permanent incisors had completely developed in grazing experiments, conducted from June to September 2001, with three Suffolk castrated male sheep, born in late-March 2000. A new method was developed to investigate bite mass and bite force, using hand-constructed swards, which were composed of groups of four (4L), eight (8L), twelve (12L), sixteen (16L) and twenty (20L) leaves of cocksfoot (Dactylis glomerata) arranged 15 cm apart. Each group of leaves was attached to a separate three-directional load cell.The period of time between loss of temporary incisors and the complete eruption of permanent incisors was c. 1 month. The number of bites per group of leaves increased with increasing leaf density. The number of bites per group of leaves was higher after the loss of temporary incisors than with the permanent incisors. The number of leaves per bite and dry-matter (DM) intake per bite were almost twice as great with permanent incisors than after the loss of temporary incisors; DM intakes per bite force were 3·9–4·9 mg N−1 and 1·7–2·6 mg N−1 respectively. After the loss of temporary incisors, the proportion of forward-direction forces accounted for 0·805 of the forces in the 4L treatment and 0·155–0·317 of the forces in the 8L–20L treatments. In contrast, the proportion of forward-direction forces accounted for only 0·292 in the 4L treatment and 0·026–0·163 in the 8L–20L treatments with permanent incisors. The angles of bite forces were almost the same (54·7–56·3°) when sheep used a forward direction, and were 51·3–57·3° when sheep used a backward direction.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2494.2004.00428.x
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