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Gulf Coast Natives, sheep with historic links to long-ago French and Spanish settlers, could help provide a new livestock option for Southern farmers. These wool-type sheep are part of a cooperative ARS-Louisiana State University breeding program to produce a new composite sheep breed to withstand the Mid-South's steamy summers and prolific parasite population. Descended from sheep brought to North America by early French and Spanish explorers and settlers, the Gulf Coast Natives have unusually high resistance to parasite infestation and can tolerate high temperatures and humidity better than other breeds. In their breeding program, ARS scientists also are using Dorset sheep, an English breed; St. Croix, a tropical breed with good heat tolerance and parasite resistance; Polypay, a composite U.S. breed; and Texel and Romanov sheep to add size to the mix. St. Croix sheep offer the advantage of producing hair rather than wool. While the hair has no market value, wool markets are often too far away to make wool sales feasible for Southern producers, who still must face the expense of having wool sheep sheared. In the first phase of the crossbreeding program, three-breed lambs have grown well from birth to weaning.
South Central Family Farm Research Center, Booneville, AR
Michael A. Brown, (501) 675-3834
Feeding unmarketable onions to hungry sheep is a safe way to recycle what otherwise is destined for the landfill. ARS scientists found that sheep gained as much weight when fed onions as when fed expensive feed grains. For the onion grower, the practice would turn a liability into a money maker; for the sheep producer, it supplies a cheap source of nutritious feed. American farmers produce nearly three million tons of onions each year, and many don't make it to market. In some years, bumper crops far exceed market demand. Also, in some areas up to a 40 percent of the onions have to be discarded because they are too small or otherwise don't meet standards. Growers also must remove unharvested onions from a field to keep them from becoming reservoirs for plant disease. Luckily, many onion-growing areas also produce sheep.
Range Management Research Unit, Las Cruces, NM
Rick Estell, (505) 646-6332
Last updated: October 28, 1996
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Last Modified: 02/11/2002
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