Effects of willow (Salix) versus poplar (Populus) supplementation on the reproductive performance of ewes grazing low quality drought pasture during mating

2005 
Abstract An 87 days grazing experiment, in the late summer/autumn of 2002 in Masterton (New Zealand), compared the effects of willow ( Salix ) versus poplar ( Populus ) supplementation (1.3 kg fresh/ewe/day), during mating, on reproductive performance and wool production in ewes grazing low quality drought pasture. A rotational grazing system with 285 mixed age Romney ewes (55.2 ± 0.54 kg) was used, with 95 ewes per treatment (control, willow-supplemented and poplar-supplemented). All ewes were offered about 0.70 kg dry matter (DM)/day of low quality pasture, containing 62% dead matter, with pre- and post-grazing pasture masses of 941 and 456 kg DM/ha. Pasture consumed was typical of drought pasture; 571 g neutral detergent fibre (NDF)/kg DM, 0.540 organic matter digestibility (OMD). Both the willow and poplar diets selected were higher in OMD and metabolisable energy (ME) and had a higher ratio of readily fermentable carbohydrate (CHO) to structural CHO, than the pasture diet selected. Willow contained higher concentrations of condensed tannin (CT; 52 g/kg versus 19 g/kg; P P Melampsora larici-populina ), which may produce an unknown oestrogenic substance. There were no treatment effects on wool production and only small treatment effects on the LW of single- and twin-born lambs at birth and weaning. Willow tree trimmings are a beneficial supplement for increasing the reproductive rate of ewes grazing drought pasture during the pre-mating and mating periods and they may be superior to poplar tree trimmings, due to higher concentrations of both CT and phenolic glycosides. Willow supplementation increased the intakes of DM and ME, but this did not explain all of the increase in reproductive rate. The increased concentration of total N, CT, phenolic glycosides and water-soluble CHO in the diet of supplemented ewes would be likely to increase amino acid absorption and this may explain the remainder of the increase in ewe reproductive rate from willow supplementation.
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