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Featured researches published by R.P. Littlejohn.


Soil Research | 2003

Estimating a nitrous oxide emission factor for animal urine from some New Zealand pastoral soils

Cecile A. M. de Klein; Louise Barton; Robert R. Sherlock; Zheng Li; R.P. Littlejohn

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change methodology estimates that over 50% of total nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in New Zealand derive from animal excreta-N deposited during grazing. The emission factor for excreta-N as used by this methodology has an important impact on New Zealand’s total N2O inventory. The objectives of this study were to refine the N2O emission factor for urine by simultaneously measuring N2O emissions from 5 pastoral soils of different drainage class, in 3 different regions in New Zealand following a single application of urine; plus test various aspects of the soil cover method for determining emission factors. Cow urine and synthetic urine was applied to pastoral soils in autumn 2000 and N2O emissions were measured using closed flux chambers at regular intervals for 4–18 months following application. The N2O emission factors for cow urine estimated for the first 4 months after urine application varied greatly depending on rainfall and soil drainage class, and ranged from 0.3 to 2.5% of the urine-N applied, suggesting that adopting a single emission factor for New Zealand may be inappropriate. The largest emission factor was found in a poorly drained soil, and the lowest emission factor was found in a well-drained stony soil. Ongoing measurements on one of the soils resulted in an increase in emission factors as the N2O emissions had not reached background levels 4 months after urine application. To characterise urine-induced N2O emissions, we recommend measurements continue until N2O emissions from urine-amended soil return to background levels. Furthermore, we recommend using real animal urine rather than synthetic urine in studies when determining the N2O emission factor for urine. SR8 Nss C Ain et Additional keywords: cow urine, emission factor, nitrous oxide inventory, soil cover, soil drainage class.


New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research | 2005

The impacts of nitrogen fertilisation and increased stocking rate on pasture yield, soil physical condition and nutrient losses in drainage from a cattle‐grazed pasture

R. M. Monaghan; R. J. Paton; L. C. Smith; J. J. Drewry; R.P. Littlejohn

Abstract The effects of increasing nitrogen (N) fertiliser inputs, and associated cattle stocking rates, on pasture yield and composition, soil physical quality and nutrient losses in drainage were measured in an experiment on permanent white clover/ryegrass pastures in eastern Southland, New Zealand. Treatments were established on hydrologically‐isolated replicate plots (900 m2) where pastures received annual fertiliser N inputs of 0, 100, 200 or 400 kg ha–1 and were grazed throughout spring, summer, and autumn of each year by non‐lactating dairy cattle. Our aim was to determine if N fertilisation of cattle pastures led to the deterioration of pasture or soil quality, or to the excessive loss of nutrients in drainage over the 3–4 years after such land management started. Pasture and soil monitoring showed that N fertilisation and increased stocking rate resulted in large, but variable, increases in pasture yield, with little discernible effect on soil physical condition, as evidenced by twice‐yearly measurements of soil bulk density, percentage of soil pores >300 μm, soil macroporosity (volumetric percentage of pores >30 μm), hydraulic conductivity, and air permeability. A cyclical pattern of spring soil compaction followed by recovery over summer, autumn, and winter was evident in the 0–5 cm soil layer within all treatments. Mean annual pasture responses to applied fertiliser N were 14.8, 12.9, and 9.1 kg DM kg–1 N applied in the 100, 200, and 400 N treatments, respectively, with greater responses observed in spring than in autumn in 3 out of 4 years. N fertilisation significantly increased losses of nitrate‐N and Ca in drainage but had no significant effect on K, Mg, Na, sulphate‐S, Cl, and P drainage losses. Within the context of the potential for enriching groundwater supplies of domestic drinking water, these losses suggest that annual fertiliser N inputs should not exceed approx. 170 kg N ha–1 yr–1 at this site. Considered from the perspective of potential surface water enrichment with P and N promoting nuisance weed and algal growth, losses of N and P in drainage water exceeded currently accepted guidelines, especially for N. The responses measured in this study represent a system that has recently undergone an improvement in soil fertility along with a change from sheep to cattle grazing. We thus caution that our findings pertain to short‐term changes in soil and plant responses and may not accurately reflect those in a system that has been in long‐term (>20 years) equilibrium.


Meat Science | 2001

Electrical stimulation of red deer (Cervus elaphus) carcasses: Effects on rate of pH-decline, meat tenderness, colour stability and water-holding capacity

E. Wiklund; J.M Stevenson-Barry; S.J Duncan; R.P. Littlejohn

A total of 14 female red deer were included in a study on the effects of low voltage carcass electrical stimulation on meat tenderness, colour stability and water-holding capacity. Carcasses were randomly allocated to either electrical stimulation treatment (ES; 90-95 V unipolar pulses, 7.5 ms duration, 15 Hz for a duration of 55 s) or no electrical stimulation (non-ES) (n=7 in each group). Temperature and pH decline was recorded in M.m. triceps brachii, longissimus dorsi et lumborum (at the last rib; LD) and biceps femoris, at intervals from 0.5 to 20 h post-mortem. At 24 h post-mortem, LD from the left side were excised, vacuum packaged and refrigerated at -1.5°C. Glycogen concentrations, measured at 30 min post-mortem, and ultimate pH did not differ between groups. Compared to controls, ES increased the rate of muscle pH decline and produced lower shear forces at 1 day, 1 week and 3 weeks post-mortem, but these differences disappeared by 6 and 12 weeks post-mortem. Sarcomere lengths at 24 h post-mortem were unchanged by ES. After 1 week of refrigerated storage, ES significantly reduced display life (hours of Minolta a* value ⩾ 12), but this difference disappeared at 3, 6 and 12 weeks of ageing. ES did not affect drip at any ageing time point. The present results demonstrate that the benefits of ES on tenderness are not permanent, and the procedure is not necessary for a long-term, chilled product. This study showed no detrimental effects of using electrical stimulation on meat colour stability or drip loss.


New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research | 2000

A survey of soil physical properties on sheep and dairy farms in southern New Zealand

J. J. Drewry; R.P. Littlejohn; R. J. Paton

Abstract The study compared soil macroporosity, bulk density, air permeability, and hydraulic conductivity on 97 sheep and 87 dairy farm sites surveyed in Southland and South Otago, New Zealand. Soil physical properties of 4 soil groups (15 soils) were investigated. Soils on sheep farms surveyed had significantly greater air permeability than soils on dairy farms, averaged over 0–15 cm. Soils on sheep farms had significantly greater saturated hydraulic conductivity (86 mm h‐1 and 26 mm h‐1) than soils on dairy farms (32 mm h‐1and 10 mm h‐1), at 0–5 cm and 10–15 cm, respectively. Macroporosity decreased from 0–5 cm to 5–10 cm, at a significantly greater rate on dairy farms (by 3.6% v/v) than sheep farms (by 1.5% v/v). Bulk density increased between 0–5 cm and 5–10 cm by a greater amount for dairy farms (0.16 Mg m‐3) than for sheep farms (0.12 Mg m‐3). Macroporosity on some Fragic Pallic Soils was considered limiting for plant growth, while Firm Brown Soils were regarded as well structured and most likely to resist treading damage.


Meat Science | 2002

A comparison of biochemical and meat quality variables in red deer (Cervus elaphus) following either slaughter at pasture or killing at a deer slaughter plant

J.C Pollard; R.P. Littlejohn; G.W Asher; A.J.T Pearse; J.M Stevenson-Barry; S.K McGregor; T.R Manley; S.J Duncan; C.M Sutton; K.L Pollock; J Prescott

To investigate effects of pre-slaughter handling on blood and muscle biochemistry and venison quality, paddock-shot (n=8) and commercially slaughtered red deer (n=8) were compared. The deer were kept in two larger groups. One stag per group per day was head-shot, exsanguinated, electrically stimulated then transported 150 m to a deer slaughter premises (DSP) for processing. Prior to each slaughter day one of the groups was mustered into a deer yards and six (including two experimental) deer were selected for commercial handling and processing (including electrical stimulation) at the same DSP. Blood samples taken during exsanguination showed higher levels of cortisol, progesterone, glucose, lactate, albumin, creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase and packed cell volume in the DSP-killed deer compared with the paddock-shot deer (P<0.05). Interpretation of these values indicated that pre-slaughter handling created moderate stress and high levels of muscular exertion or damage, possibly related to antagonism during lairage. However muscle glycogen, pH and meat quality measurements showed only minor, muscle-specific differences between treatments.


Mammalian Genome | 1993

Microsatellites and associated repetitive elements in the sheep genome

F. C. Buchanan; R.P. Littlejohn; Sue M. Galloway; A. M. Crawford

To determine the frequency and clustering of a variety of simple di-and trinucleotide repeats, an Artiodactyl short interspersed element (SINE), an ovine satellite repeat, and a human Alu 1 repeat were used to screen a random selection of cosmids containing inserts of ovine genomic DNA. In total, 197 individual cosmids were digested with EcoRI and the fragments separated on 0.7% agarose gels. Southern blots of these gels were then sequentially probed with (AC)7, (CT)9, and (CAC)6 oligonucleotides, and the repeats described above. The frequency at which (AC)1, (CT)n, and (CAC)n repeats were found in the cosmids indicated that they occurred at average intervals of 65 kb, 367 kb, and 213 kb respectively within the ovine genome. The Artiodactyl SINE was the most common, occurring at an average interval of 20 kb. No human Alu 1 sequences were detected. There was a significant positive association between the (AC)n and the Artiodactyl SINE. This association is quite strong as there was significant clustering of the two repeats both within cosmids and also within the EcoRI fragments of the digested genomic fragments. With the exception of the sheep satellite sequence, which occurs in tandem arrays, none of the other repeats showed significant clustering within the 41-kb (average size) cosmid inserts. The first 25 ovine microsatellites we characterized had an average polymorphic information content (PIC) of 0.65. The different microsatellite types, containing either perfect, imperfect, or compound repeats, had similar average PICs of 0.64, 0.65, and 0.66 respectively. There was a weak regression relationship (R2(adj)%=21.9) between the length of the longest uninterrupted dinucleotide repeat in the largest allele and the PIC of the microsatellite.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2003

Effects of testosterone on pedicle formation and its transformation to antler in castrated male, freemartin and normal female red deer (Cervus elaphus).

Chunyi Li; R.P. Littlejohn; Ian D. Corson; James M. Suttie

Pedicles and antlers are male deer secondary sexual characters. As such, development of these structures is under the control of androgen hormones. Pedicle growth is caused by increasing and elevated plasma testosterone (T) levels, whereas first antler transformation from a fully formed pedicle occurs when the T levels are decreasing. Castration prior to pedicle initiation abrogates future pedicle and antler formation. Female deer also have the potential to develop pedicles and antlers, but they do not normally express this phenotype due to lack of sufficient androgen stimulation. Previous studies have shown that female white-tailed deer could be readily induced to grow pedicles as well as antlers by singular administration of exogenous androgens (EA), but in red deer (Cervus elaphus) singular or irregular EA treatment could only stimulate castrated male, normal or ovariectomised females to grow pedicles, but not antlers. The present study was set out to test whether these EA-induced pedicles in red deer failed to give rise to antlers was because they were constitutively incapable of doing so, or because the plasma T profile naturally exhibited in intact stags was not achieved by the androgen treatment used in these previous studies. Eight castrated red deer stag calves, 3 freemartins (females which were born co-twin to males), and 3 normal female red deer were used in the present study and treated with EA, either as biweekly injections for the castrates or as implants for freemartin and females until the late stage of pedicle growth. Blood sampling was carried out biweekly for the analyses of plasma T and IGF1 concentration. The results showed that the natural plasma T profile in the experimental deer was successfully mimicked through regular EA treatment and subsequent withdrawal at late pedicle growth stage. All castrated males, 2 out of 3 freemartin, and 1 out of 3 normal female red deer formed not only pedicles, but also antlers. Based on these results, we conclude that EA-induced pedicles at least in red deer of the genus Cervus, like those in the genus Odocoileus, are constitutively capable of giving rise to antlers, if they are of sufficient height.


Biological Invasions | 2011

Transportation of nonindigenous species via soil on international aircraft passengers’ footwear

M.R. McNeill; C.B. Phillips; Sandra Young; Farhat A. Shah; Lee T. Aalders; Nigel L. Bell; Emily Gerard; R.P. Littlejohn

The potential for transported soil to harbour and spread nonindigenous species (NIS) is widely recognised and many National Plant Protection Organisations (NPPOs) restrict or prohibit its movement. However, surprisingly few studies have surveyed soil while it is in transit to provide direct support for its role in accidental introductions of NIS. Moreover, there are few border interception records for soil organisms because they are neither easily detected nor routinely isolated and identified. Better data would improve evaluations of risks from soil transported via different pathways, enable targeting of management resources at the riskiest pathways, and support development of new risk management methods. We surveyed organisms present in soil that had been removed from footwear being carried in the baggage of international aircraft passengers arriving in New Zealand and recorded high incidences, counts and diversities of viable bacteria, fungi, nematodes and seeds, as well as several live arthropods. These included taxa that have not been recorded in New Zealand and were therefore almost certainly nonindigenous to this country. In each gram of soil, there was an estimated 52–84% incidence of genera that contain species regulated by New Zealand’s NPPO, which suggests many were potentially harmful. Variation in the incidences and counts of soil organisms with sample weight, footwear type and season at the port of departure indicated it may be possible to develop methods for targeting management resources at the riskiest footwear. Comparisons with previously published data supported the hypothesis that survival of soil organisms is greater when they are transported in protected (e.g. in luggage) rather than unprotected environments (e.g. external surfaces of sea containers); this offers opportunities to develop methods for targeting management resources at the most hazardous soil pathways.


Domestic Animal Endocrinology | 1991

Genetically lean and fat sheep differ in their growth hormone response to growth hormone-releasing factor.

James M. Suttie; E.A. Lord; Peter D. Gluckman; P. F. Fennessy; R.P. Littlejohn

The aim of this study was to compare the ovine growth hormone (oGH) responses of 5 genetically lean and 5 genetically fat 9 month old ram lambs (selected on the basis of their ultrasonic backfat thickness) given two 0.3 micrograms kg-1 liveweight intravenous injections of synthetic human pancreatic GH releasing factor analogue Nle27 hGHRF29 -NH2 (GRF-29) 150 minutes apart. Plasma oGH response curves were analysed using an exponential 2 compartmental model and comparisons made through parallel curve analysis. Plasma oGH levels over 200 ng ml-1 were detected in response to GRF-29. Exponential model parameters indicated that lean lambs had a significantly higher rate of oGH release into the plasma after both consecutive GRF-29 injections, and a significantly lower rate of oGH clearance from the plasma after the second GRF-29 injection only. Significantly smaller peak oGH responses to the second GRF-29 injection were shown by the fat lambs. These results suggest that oGH release is impaired in genetically fat lambs and that either the synthesis of releasable oGH is reduced or the inhibitory tone is greater in the fat lambs. The lean and fat sheep may provide a useful model for the study of hormonal control of factors affecting leanness and fatness.


The Journal of Agricultural Science | 2011

Land-use intensification in New Zealand: effects on soil properties and pasture production

D. J. Houlbrooke; R. J. Paton; R.P. Littlejohn; J. D. Morton

Land-use intensification requires more farm inputs to sustain or increase farm product outputs. However, a common concern for land-use intensification is the potential deterioration of soil. The North Otago Rolling Downlands (NORD) region of New Zealand is drought prone, and although traditionally limited to extensive sheep farming, there are large-scale conversions to intensive cattle grazing operations such as dairy farming resulting from an irrigation scheme commissioned in 2006. Pallic soils (Aeric Fragiaqualf in US Soil Taxonomy) such as those in the NORD region are prone to soil compaction because of their ‘high’ structural vulnerability under intensive management. To address these concerns, a field trial was established on a common NORD Pallic soil (Timaru silt loam) to determine how land-use intensification affects indicators of soil quality (macroporosity, bulk density, structural condition score, total and mineralizable carbon and nitrogen and earthworms) and pasture production. The treatments compare irrigated v . dryland pasture and sheep v . cattle grazing on 16 plots. The findings show that soil physical quality responds more quickly to changes in land-use pressure than do biochemical and organic indicators. Both irrigation and cattle grazing, particularly in combination, increased soil compaction; macroporosity on irrigated plots grazed by cattle ranged from 9·1 to 13·3% v/v at a depth of 0–50 mm, compared to dryland plots with sheep grazing (18·9–23·0% v/v). Soil compaction/damage has implications for pasture production, soil hydrology and nutrient movement. Land management practices for intensive cattle grazing of irrigated soil prone to treading damage therefore need to implement high compaction risk strategies to avoid or ameliorate potential changes to soil quality.

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