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Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study assessed the effects of metabolic load imposed by pregnancy and lactation on productivity and offspring performance in high-yielding dairy sheep. Productivity was assessed in terms of offspring and maternal milk yield, metabolic profile, and body condition. Our results sho...

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Autores principales: Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis, Heras-Molina, Ana, Torres-Rovira, Laura, Sanz-Fernández, María Victoria, García-Contreras, Consolación, Vázquez-Gómez, Marta, Feyjoo, Pablo, Cáceres, Elisa, Frías-Mateo, Millán, Hernández, Fernando, Martínez-Ros, Paula, González-Martin, Juan Vicente, González-Bulnes, Antonio, Astiz, Susana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6617180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31151216
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9060295
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author Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis
Heras-Molina, Ana
Torres-Rovira, Laura
Sanz-Fernández, María Victoria
García-Contreras, Consolación
Vázquez-Gómez, Marta
Feyjoo, Pablo
Cáceres, Elisa
Frías-Mateo, Millán
Hernández, Fernando
Martínez-Ros, Paula
González-Martin, Juan Vicente
González-Bulnes, Antonio
Astiz, Susana
author_facet Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis
Heras-Molina, Ana
Torres-Rovira, Laura
Sanz-Fernández, María Victoria
García-Contreras, Consolación
Vázquez-Gómez, Marta
Feyjoo, Pablo
Cáceres, Elisa
Frías-Mateo, Millán
Hernández, Fernando
Martínez-Ros, Paula
González-Martin, Juan Vicente
González-Bulnes, Antonio
Astiz, Susana
author_sort Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study assessed the effects of metabolic load imposed by pregnancy and lactation on productivity and offspring performance in high-yielding dairy sheep. Productivity was assessed in terms of offspring and maternal milk yield, metabolic profile, and body condition. Our results show that maternal productivity and lamb body weight and growth are not compromised by pregnancy and lactation because dairy sheep, when appropriately managed, seem to be able to cover metabolic demands of pregnancy and high milk production without losing productivity. ABSTRACT: Pregnancy and lactation, especially when concurrent, create a rather metabolically demanding situation in dairy ruminants, but little is known about their effects on offspring phenotype and milk yield. Here, we evaluated the impact of pregnancy and lactation on the metabolic traits and productive performance of Lacaune dairy sheep and their offspring. Productive performance was measured in terms of milk yield, body weight (BW), body condition score (BCS), and size. Productivity was assessed during mid-pregnancy (75 ± 5 d) and late pregnancy (142 ± 4 d) and at 52 ± 5 d in the postpartum period. During pregnancy, high-yielding ewes had higher BW, BCS, plasma glucose, cholesterol, β-OHB, and NEFA than low-yielding ewes, but lower levels of lactate and urea. High-yielding animals had lower BCS after lambing, but their lambs showed greater growth. Productivity during lactation was affected by ewe age and parity: Mature ewes (but not maiden sheep) whose BCS increased steeply during pregnancy yielded more milk in the subsequent lactation than those whose BCS did not increase. Lamb BW and size were positively associated with milk yield in the subsequent lactation. Mature ewes had higher yields than maiden sheep, and mature ewes with multiple pregnancies produced more milk than those with singleton pregnancies. Ewes with male singleton pregnancies also showed higher yield than those with female singletons. These results demonstrate that high-yielding dairy sheep, when appropriately fed and managed, can adequately cover the metabolic demands of pregnancy and high milk production (even when concurrent) without losing productivity.
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spelling pubmed-66171802019-07-18 Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis Heras-Molina, Ana Torres-Rovira, Laura Sanz-Fernández, María Victoria García-Contreras, Consolación Vázquez-Gómez, Marta Feyjoo, Pablo Cáceres, Elisa Frías-Mateo, Millán Hernández, Fernando Martínez-Ros, Paula González-Martin, Juan Vicente González-Bulnes, Antonio Astiz, Susana Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study assessed the effects of metabolic load imposed by pregnancy and lactation on productivity and offspring performance in high-yielding dairy sheep. Productivity was assessed in terms of offspring and maternal milk yield, metabolic profile, and body condition. Our results show that maternal productivity and lamb body weight and growth are not compromised by pregnancy and lactation because dairy sheep, when appropriately managed, seem to be able to cover metabolic demands of pregnancy and high milk production without losing productivity. ABSTRACT: Pregnancy and lactation, especially when concurrent, create a rather metabolically demanding situation in dairy ruminants, but little is known about their effects on offspring phenotype and milk yield. Here, we evaluated the impact of pregnancy and lactation on the metabolic traits and productive performance of Lacaune dairy sheep and their offspring. Productive performance was measured in terms of milk yield, body weight (BW), body condition score (BCS), and size. Productivity was assessed during mid-pregnancy (75 ± 5 d) and late pregnancy (142 ± 4 d) and at 52 ± 5 d in the postpartum period. During pregnancy, high-yielding ewes had higher BW, BCS, plasma glucose, cholesterol, β-OHB, and NEFA than low-yielding ewes, but lower levels of lactate and urea. High-yielding animals had lower BCS after lambing, but their lambs showed greater growth. Productivity during lactation was affected by ewe age and parity: Mature ewes (but not maiden sheep) whose BCS increased steeply during pregnancy yielded more milk in the subsequent lactation than those whose BCS did not increase. Lamb BW and size were positively associated with milk yield in the subsequent lactation. Mature ewes had higher yields than maiden sheep, and mature ewes with multiple pregnancies produced more milk than those with singleton pregnancies. Ewes with male singleton pregnancies also showed higher yield than those with female singletons. These results demonstrate that high-yielding dairy sheep, when appropriately fed and managed, can adequately cover the metabolic demands of pregnancy and high milk production (even when concurrent) without losing productivity. MDPI 2019-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6617180/ /pubmed/31151216 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9060295 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Pesántez-Pacheco, José Luis
Heras-Molina, Ana
Torres-Rovira, Laura
Sanz-Fernández, María Victoria
García-Contreras, Consolación
Vázquez-Gómez, Marta
Feyjoo, Pablo
Cáceres, Elisa
Frías-Mateo, Millán
Hernández, Fernando
Martínez-Ros, Paula
González-Martin, Juan Vicente
González-Bulnes, Antonio
Astiz, Susana
Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title_full Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title_fullStr Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title_full_unstemmed Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title_short Maternal Metabolic Demands Caused by Pregnancy and Lactation: Association with Productivity and Offspring Phenotype in High-Yielding Dairy Ewes
title_sort maternal metabolic demands caused by pregnancy and lactation: association with productivity and offspring phenotype in high-yielding dairy ewes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6617180/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31151216
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9060295
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