Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data

Sheep meat producers derive the majority of income from sales of weaned lambs, determined by flock conception rates, litter size, and lamb survival. Field data from commercial flocks can inform sensitivity analyses of the effect of litter size on flock productivity, feed demand, and gross margin. Th...

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Published in:Animal
Main Authors: L. Farrell, P. Creighton, A. Bohan, F. McGovern, N. McHugh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731122001975
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author L. Farrell
P. Creighton
A. Bohan
F. McGovern
N. McHugh
author_facet L. Farrell
P. Creighton
A. Bohan
F. McGovern
N. McHugh
author_sort L. Farrell
collection DOAJ
container_title Animal
description Sheep meat producers derive the majority of income from sales of weaned lambs, determined by flock conception rates, litter size, and lamb survival. Field data from commercial flocks can inform sensitivity analyses of the effect of litter size on flock productivity, feed demand, and gross margin. This study adapted an established bio-economic model of a flock of breeding ewes informed by statistical relationships (from linear models) between flock litter size (lambs born per ewe lambing) and production factors (such as flock barren rate, litter birth type and lamb birth weight) identified using 156 145 animal records from the Irish national sheep breeding database. Sensitivity analyses were undertaken to investigate the effects of flock litter size on flock production, feed demand, and gross margin. Results showed that as flock litter size increased, the proportion of lambs born as multiples increased, with 14 % of lambs born as singles when flock litter size was 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing. Flock gross margin increased from €2 205 to €7 730 as litter size increased from 1.0 to 2.0 lambs born per ewe lambing. As litter size increased from 1.0 to 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock gross margin increased linearly by, on average, €52 per 0.01 increase in litter size. At a litter size of > 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock gross margin increased on average €12 per 0.01 increase in litter size. At a litter size of 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock efficiency (at 65.0 kg of lamb weaned per ewe presented for breeding), weaning rate (at 1.5 lambs weaned per ewe presented for breeding; not including excess lambs from large litters sold within a week after birth and thus not weaned on-farm), and gross margin (at €8 500) began to plateau. The results indicate lower marginal returns in gross margin at very high flock litter size, due to the lower value of additional lambs born as triplets and quadruplets compared with single- and twin-born lambs. However, the diminishing economic returns occurred at higher flock litter size than are currently biologically achieved in most flocks. Quantification from this analysis demonstrates how the value of increasing the number of lambs born changes at very high flock litter size, which can inform the priorities and performance benchmarking for international sheep meat production industries.
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spelling doaj-art-2fcbca1de35342ce91eefe95eca3700f2025-08-19T19:53:56ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112022-10-01161010064010.1016/j.animal.2022.100640Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field dataL. Farrell0P. Creighton1A. Bohan2F. McGovern3N. McHugh4Teagasc Animal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Mellows Campus, Athenry, Co. Galway, Ireland; Corresponding author at: DairyNZ, Private Bag 3221, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.Teagasc Animal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Mellows Campus, Athenry, Co. Galway, IrelandSheep Ireland, Ballincollig, Co. Cork, IrelandTeagasc Animal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Mellows Campus, Athenry, Co. Galway, IrelandAnimal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Teagasc, Moorepark, Fermoy, Co. Cork, IrelandSheep meat producers derive the majority of income from sales of weaned lambs, determined by flock conception rates, litter size, and lamb survival. Field data from commercial flocks can inform sensitivity analyses of the effect of litter size on flock productivity, feed demand, and gross margin. This study adapted an established bio-economic model of a flock of breeding ewes informed by statistical relationships (from linear models) between flock litter size (lambs born per ewe lambing) and production factors (such as flock barren rate, litter birth type and lamb birth weight) identified using 156 145 animal records from the Irish national sheep breeding database. Sensitivity analyses were undertaken to investigate the effects of flock litter size on flock production, feed demand, and gross margin. Results showed that as flock litter size increased, the proportion of lambs born as multiples increased, with 14 % of lambs born as singles when flock litter size was 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing. Flock gross margin increased from €2 205 to €7 730 as litter size increased from 1.0 to 2.0 lambs born per ewe lambing. As litter size increased from 1.0 to 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock gross margin increased linearly by, on average, €52 per 0.01 increase in litter size. At a litter size of > 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock gross margin increased on average €12 per 0.01 increase in litter size. At a litter size of 2.2 lambs born per ewe lambing, flock efficiency (at 65.0 kg of lamb weaned per ewe presented for breeding), weaning rate (at 1.5 lambs weaned per ewe presented for breeding; not including excess lambs from large litters sold within a week after birth and thus not weaned on-farm), and gross margin (at €8 500) began to plateau. The results indicate lower marginal returns in gross margin at very high flock litter size, due to the lower value of additional lambs born as triplets and quadruplets compared with single- and twin-born lambs. However, the diminishing economic returns occurred at higher flock litter size than are currently biologically achieved in most flocks. Quantification from this analysis demonstrates how the value of increasing the number of lambs born changes at very high flock litter size, which can inform the priorities and performance benchmarking for international sheep meat production industries.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731122001975Ewe ageLambing rateProfitSimulationWeaning rate
spellingShingle L. Farrell
P. Creighton
A. Bohan
F. McGovern
N. McHugh
Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
Ewe age
Lambing rate
Profit
Simulation
Weaning rate
title Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
title_full Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
title_fullStr Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
title_full_unstemmed Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
title_short Bio-economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
title_sort bio economic modelling of sheep meat production systems with varying flock litter size using field data
topic Ewe age
Lambing rate
Profit
Simulation
Weaning rate
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731122001975
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