I. A. Wright
Macaulay Institute
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Featured researches published by I. A. Wright.
Animal Science | 2006
I. A. Wright; J.R. Jones; D.A. Davies; G.R. Davidson; J.E. Vale
An experiment was conducted to examine the effects of mixed grazing of sheep plus cattle under continuous stocking of permanent pasture at different sward heights. The experiment had a 2×3 factorial design, with two sward surface heights (4–5 and 8–10 cm) and three combinations of animal species viz., sheep only, cattle only and sheep plus cattle. There were two replicate plots of each treatment combination and the experiment was conducted over 2 years consecutively. The sheep were Beulah Speckled Face ewes and their single Suffolk-cross lambs while the cattle were yearling Charolais-cross steers. Six ‘core’ steers and six ‘core’ ewes and their lambs grazed plots, as appropriately, while additional, non-experimental steers and ewes and their lambs were used to maintain sward heights. Each year the steers and the ewes grazed the pastures from May to October, while lambs were weaned and removed each year from the experiment in July. There was no significant effect of mixed grazing on live-weight gain of steers, but ewes had significantly higher live-weight gains on the sheep plus cattle treatment than on the sheep-only treatment (82 v . 61 g/day; P v . 212 g/day; P v . 250 g/day; P >0·05). The total output of live-weight gain per ha from steers, ewes and lambs was not significantly affected by animal species combination. It is concluded that while output per ha is not enhanced by mixed grazing by sheep and cattle when sward height is controlled, the live-weight gain of ewes is increased and the live-weight gain of lambs can be increased on taller swards.
Domestic Animal Endocrinology | 1992
I. A. Wright; S. M. Rhind; A. J. Smith; T. K. Whyte
An experiment was conducted to test the hypothesis that the effect of body fatness on LH pulsatility in post-partum cows is entirely independent of the negative feedback effects of ovarian steroids. Forty beef cows were fed in the last 100 d of gestation so that they achieved either a thin (mean score 1.97) or fat (mean score 2.79) body condition (0 to 5 scale) at calving and were fed after calving to maintain live weight and body condition. At 15 (sd 3.7) d post partum all cows were ovariectomised and half from each body condition score treatment group received a subcutaneous estradiol implant (+EST) while the remainder received no implant (-EST). At weeks 5 and 9 post-partum blood samples were collected via jugular catheter every 20 minutes for 10 hr on two consecutive d and on the third d cows were injected via the jugular vein with 2.5 micrograms GnRH. Blood samples were collected every 15 minutes for 1 hr before and 2 hr after GnRH injection. At 5 and 9 weeks the fatter cows had significantly higher mean LH concentrations, baseline LH concentrations, LH pulse amplitudes and pulse frequencies (P < 0.01). Implantation with estradiol in both fat and thin cows reduced mean LH concentrations, baseline LH concentrations, LH pulse amplitudes and pulse frequencies (P < 0.001). The lack of interaction between body condition and the presence or absence of estradiol implies that the effect of body condition on LH release is independent of ovarian steroid feedback mechanisms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Animal Science | 1998
Pilar Frutos; Oswaldo Buratovich; Francisco Javier Giráldez; Ángel R. Mantecón; I. A. Wright
Thirty single-bearing Merino ewes were used to examine the effect of feeding supplement, from 91 to 140 days of gestation, on changes in chemical composition of the ewes, on the relationships with live weight and body condition score and on the foetus. Ewes grazed a perennial ryegrass pasture and were offered either no supplement or 500 g per head per day of a concentrate supplement from days 30 to 90 and (or) from days 91 to 140 of pregnancy. Maternal carcass and non-carcass components, uterine wall, foetus and placenta plus cotyledons were chemically analysed. Live weight (LW) and body condition score (BCS) on day 140 were both affected by supplementation during late pregnancy, mobilization of protein and fat being lower in animals receiving supplement. BCS accounted for more variation than LW in the carcass fat depot. Because this depot was the most important source of energy from days 91 to 140 of gestation, this suggests that BCS is a useful estimator of mobilization of maternal fat reserves during this stage of pregnancy. The ability to mobilize reserves and protect foetal growth by Merino ewes in southern Europe, where large fluctuations in grass growth rate exposes them to considerable undernutrition as pregnancy proceeds, was confirmed in this experiment. However, when the nutritional regime is extreme, supplementary feeding to the ewes is recommended, in order to make the whole system economically profitable.
BSAP Occasional Publication | 1994
Mª Dolores Carro Travieso; Ángel R. Mantecón; I. A. Wright; Iain J. Gordon
2 pages, 2 tables.--Contributed to: Livestock Production and Land Use in Hills and Uplands. Occasional Publication No. 18. British Society of Animal Production (Edimburgo, Reino Unido, 1994)
Ecological Complexity | 2006
E. J. Milner-Gulland; Carol Kerven; Roy Behnke; I. A. Wright; A. Smailov
Archive | 2006
Carol Kerven; Ilya Ilych Alimaev; Roy Behnke; Grant Davidson; Nurlan Malmakov; Aidos Smailov; I. A. Wright
African Journal of Range & Forage Science | 2004
Carol Kerven; Ilya Ilych Alimaev; Roy Behnke; Grant Davidson; Leen Franchois; Nurlan Malmakov; Erik Mathijs; Aidos Smailov; Sayat Temirbekov; I. A. Wright
Animal production | 1994
I. A. Wright; S. M. Rhind; A. J. Smith; T. K. Whyte
Animal Science | 1992
I. A. Wright; S. M. Rhind; T. K. Whyte
Livestock Science | 2009
M.D. Fraser; D.A. Davies; J.E. Vale; G.R. Nute; K.G. Hallett; R.I. Richardson; I. A. Wright