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Indices for the identification of biologically productive cashmere goats within farms
•Identifies a method for farmers to identify productive cashmere goats within their farms that have high fleece weight in relation to fibre diameter and fibre length.•Demonstrates that staple length is as useful as fibre diameter for comparing cashmere goats within farms.•Develops index for effectiv...
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Published in: | Small ruminant research 2015-08, Vol.129, p.11-17 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Identifies a method for farmers to identify productive cashmere goats within their farms that have high fleece weight in relation to fibre diameter and fibre length.•Demonstrates that staple length is as useful as fibre diameter for comparing cashmere goats within farms.•Develops index for effective cashmere weight which uses the same measurement unit as fleece weight and is easily understood by farmers.
Objectively comparing cashmere goats with different cashmere production, mean fibre diameter (MFD) and staple length (SL) is difficult for farmers. We aimed to develop indices to enable cashmere producers to identify productive goats within their own farms once adjustments had been made for the primary determinants of cashmere production. That is we aimed to develop indices that identify goats and herds that biologically have a high fleece weight in relation to MFD and SL. We used a sample of 1244 commercial cashmere fleeces from goats originating from many Australian farms based in different environmental zones and a previously developed general linear model that related the logarithm of clean cashmere production (CCMwt) and any other potential determinant. In the present study, sub-models were investigated in order to develop new indices for comparing goats in the same farm, based on fleece characteristics and biological efficiency. New Index (MFD), equal to 6.02×CCMwt/1.1531MFD, was developed to identify animals of biologically high CCMwt in relation to their MFD. Unlike previously reported results that MFD is not a useful measurement for comparing the biological efficiency of cashmere goats across farms, the New Index (MFD) allows comparison of the biological efficiency of cashmere goats within farms. New Index (SL), equal to 2.70×CCMwt/1.1414SL, was developed to identify animals of biologically high CCMwt in relation to their SL. New Index (SL) is very similar to the Clean Cashmere Staple Length Index (CCSLI) that had been previously reported for comparison of cashmere goats across farms, and thus the CCSLI can be usefully used for comparing the biological efficiency of cashmere goats both across and within farms. New Index MFD, SL=8.90×CCMwt/1.243MFD+SL/2 was developed to identify animals of biologically high CCMwt in relation to both their MFD and SL within farms, and provides useful information above using either New Index (MFD) or CCSLI. The indices can be presented in the same measurement units as fleece weight, which is a biological concept eas |
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ISSN: | 0921-4488 1879-0941 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.smallrumres.2015.05.013 |