Nutrition and Feeding Behavior of Goats and Sheep Grazing Deciduous Shrub-Woodland in Northeastern Brazil
Production of sheep and goats in the Brazilian Northeast is important for the livelihood of both subsistence and market-oriented producers. Seasonal nutritional stress oh animals in the caatinga vegetational zone of this region causes periodic high mortality and chronically low productivity. Under s...
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Format: | Others |
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DigitalCommons@USU
1983
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Online Access: | https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/6420 https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7469&context=etd |
Summary: | Production of sheep and goats in the Brazilian Northeast is important for the livelihood of both subsistence and market-oriented producers. Seasonal nutritional stress oh animals in the caatinga vegetational zone of this region causes periodic high mortality and chronically low productivity. Under such conditions, the survivability of goats has been higher than for other domestic livestock. Possible reasons for this include unique aspects of dietary selection and goat feeding behavior. The objectives of this research were to seasonally determine the botanical and nutritive content of goat and sheep diets, to determine forage intake by grazing goats and sheep, and to compare their feeding behavior.
Dietary selections by sheep and goats were similar during the dry season, but diverged markedly during the wet season. Leaf litter from the deciduous trees was the major dietary component for both species during the dry season, and provided the bulk of dry season forage.
Current hypotheses predict that goats select diets of higher nutritional quality and have a greater forage intake than do sheep. Goats selected diets significantly (P.05) in cell wall content, and lower (P
This study confirmed the vertical stratification of foraging by goats and sheep. Sheep foraged more in lower vertical strata than did goats. Goats spent about 4% of their grazing time in a bipedal stance, while sheep virtually never used a bipedal stance to feed. In addition, no nutritional advantage was found for goats over sheep through use of a bipedal stance. This latter finding is constrained by the deciduous nature of the caatinga woodland during the dry season. |
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