Database of veterinary systematic reviews
J Anim Sci (2018) 96: 1962–1977
DOI: 10.1093/jas/sky072
Across the literature, there is large variation in lamb birth weight responses to changes in the ewe pregnancy nutrition. Much of this heterogeneity has been attributed to several factors inherent to each experiment; however, the relative contribution of these experimental factors has not yet been quantified. This meta-analysis aimed to systematically review the variation in lamb birth weight responses across nutritional studies involving adult multiparous ewes. Effect-sizes for individual studies were estimated using the unbiased estimator Hedges’ g, whereby positive and negative values indicate heavier and lighter treatment lambs vs. controls, respectively. Heterogeneity varied between early-, mid- and late-pregnancy undernutrition studies (I2total [early pregnancy] = 19.90%, I2total [midpregnancy] = 52.10%, I2total [late pregnancy] = 68.70%). The small average effects for early- (0.04, highest posterior density [HPD] interval = -0.22, 0.28) and mid-pregnancy undernutrition (-0.15, HPD interval = -0.35, 0.05) suggest that if farmers anticipate a potential feed shortage, ewes can be allowed to lose weight providing nutrition is resumed to adequate levels later in pregnancy. On the contrary, late-pregnancy undernutrition was associated with a significant decrease in lamb birth weight (-0.72, HPD interval = -0.86, -0.55). Thus, management practices should focus on ensuring adequate nutrition in late pregnancy. Increasing lamb birth weight could be possible by feeding ewes above their pregnancy maintenance requirement (0.23, HPD interval = 0.002, 0.48), though the number of studies is limited and further research is needed.
Roca Fraga, F. J., Lagisz, M., Nakagawa, S., Lopez-Villalobos, N., Blair, H. T., & Kenyon, P. R. (2018). Meta-analysis of lamb birth weight as influenced by pregnancy nutrition of multiparous ewes. J Anim Sci, 96(5), 1962–1977. https://doi.org/10.1093/jas/sky072 Animals, Female, Birth Weight, Pregnancy, Weight Gain, Parity, *Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Pregnancy Complications/*veterinary, Sheep/*physiology