Animals (Dec 2020)

Feeding Tall Fescue Seed Reduces Ewe Milk Production, Lamb Birth Weight and Pre-Weaning Growth Rate

  • Jessica L. Britt,
  • Maslyn A. Greene,
  • Sarah A. Wilbanks,
  • J. Keith Bertrand,
  • James L. Klotz,
  • William Bridges,
  • Glen Aiken,
  • John G. Andrae,
  • Susan K. Duckett

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10122291
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 2291

Abstract

Read online

Endophyte-infected tall fescue (E+) produces ergovaline and ergovalinine, which are mycotoxins that act as dopamine agonists to suppress prolactin and induce vasoconstriction. The experiment was designed as a 3 × 2 × 2 factorial with DRD2 genotype (AA, AG, GG), fescue seed (endophyte-free, E− or endophyte-infected, E+), stage of gestation (MID, d (day) 35–85; LATE, d 86–parturition) and all interactions in the model. Pregnant Suffolk ewes (n = 60) were stratified by genotype and fed E+ or E− seed in a total mixed ration according to treatment assignment. Serum prolactin concentrations were lower (p DRD2 genotype or two-way interaction. Lamb birth weight was lower (p p < 0.05) in ewes fed E+ fescue seed during MID and LATE gestation. Ingestion of ergovaline/ergovalinine in last trimester reduces lamb birth weight; however, lamb growth rate, milk production and total weaning weight are reduced in all ewes fed E+ during mid and last trimester.

Keywords