Maintenance of body temperature in the neonatal lamb: Effects of breed, birth weight, and litter size

被引:121
作者
Dwyer, CM [1 ]
Morgan, CA [1 ]
机构
[1] SAC, Sustainable Livestock Syst Grp, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, Midlothian, Scotland
关键词
behavior; breed; neonate; sheep; temperature;
D O I
10.2527/2006.8451093x
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
To survive, the newborn lamb must be able to maintain body temperature and to stand and move to the udder to suck colostrum to fuel heat production. The objective of this study was to investigate whether neonatal lambs showing slow behavioral progress to standing and sucking also have an impaired ability to maintain body temperature. The time taken to stand and suck after birth, rectal temperatures, and blood samples were collected from 115 newborn single, twin, and triplet lambs of 2 breeds, Scottish Blackface and Suffolk, which are known to show variations in their neonatal behavioral progress. Blood samples were assayed for thyroid hormones, known to be involved in heat production, and cortisol, which plays a role in tissue maturation before birth. ln addition, colostrum samples were collected from the 56 ewes that gave birth to the lambs, and assayed for protein, fat, and vitamin contents. Heavy lambs (more than 1 SD above the breed mean), Blackface lambs, and singleton or twin lambs were quicker to stand and suck from their mothers than lightweight (more than 1 SD below the breed mean), Suffolk, or triplet lambs. Low birth weight lambs also had lower rectal temperatures than heavier lambs (P < 0.01), as did Suffolk compared with Blackface lambs (P < 0.001). Lambs that were slow to suck after birth had lower rectal temperatures than quick lambs, and this difference persisted for at least 3 d after birth. Within breed, heavy lambs had greater plasma triiodothyronine and thyroxine immediately after birth than light lambs. Blackface lambs had greater plasma triiodothyronine and thyroxine than Suffolk lambs but tended to have less cortisol. Colostrum produced by Blackface ewes had a greater fat content than that of Suffolk ewes (P < 0.001). Thus, lambs that are behaviorally slow at birth are also less able to maintain their body temperature after birth. Although part of their lower body temperature might be attributable to behavioral influences on thermoregulation, the data also suggest that physiological differences exist between these animals. These differences may be related to different degrees of maturity at birth.
引用
收藏
页码:1093 / 1101
页数:9
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
ALEXANDER G, 1970, PHYSIOLOGY DIGESTION, P199
[2]   Effects of severity of dystocia on cold tolerance and serum concentrations of glucose and cortisol in neonatal beef calves [J].
Bellows, RA ;
Lammoglia, MA .
THERIOGENOLOGY, 2000, 53 (03) :803-813
[3]   Effect of postnatal age anti a β3-adrenergic agonist (Zeneca D7114) administration on uncoupling protein-1 abundance in the lamb [J].
Bird, JA ;
Mostyn, A ;
Clarke, L ;
Juniper, DT ;
Budge, H ;
Stephenson, T ;
Symonds, ME .
EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 86 (01) :65-70
[4]  
*BSEN ISO, 2001, 1211 BSEN ISO
[5]   Nutritional manipulation of fetal adipose tissue deposition and uncoupling protein 1 messenger RNA abundance in the sheep: Differential effects of timing and duration [J].
Budge, H ;
Edwards, LJ ;
McMillen, IC ;
Bryce, A ;
Warnes, K ;
Pearce, S ;
Stephenson, T ;
Symonds, ME .
BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION, 2004, 71 (01) :359-365
[6]  
Budge H, 2003, PEDIATR RES, V53, P302, DOI [10.1203/01.PDR.0000047653.73271.C4, 10.1203/00006450-200302000-00016]
[7]  
CABELLO G, 1981, BIOL NEONATE, V39, P208
[8]   Maternal manipulation of brown adipose tissue and liver development in the ovine fetus during late gestation [J].
Clarke, L ;
Bryant, MJ ;
Lomax, MA ;
Symonds, ME .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 1997, 77 (06) :871-883
[9]   THYROID-HORMONES AND THERMOGENESIS [J].
DAUNCEY, MJ .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NUTRITION SOCIETY, 1990, 49 (02) :203-215
[10]  
DUNCAN WF, 1990, NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, V51, P705