Wool cortisol as putative retrospective indicator of stress in ewes during the third trimester of pregnancy, and their newborns: effects of parity and litter size — an exploratory study

Publication date

2023-05-31

Authors

Zeinstra, Elly C.ISNI 0000000492962783
Vernooij, J.C.M.ORCID 0000-0002-2646-9216ISNI 0000000419500013
Bentvelzen, M. (Mireille)
van der Staay, F.J.ORCID 0000-0002-8704-3366ISNI 0000000030182192
Nordquist, RebeccaORCID 0000-0002-8541-5285ISNI 000000038838993X

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Stress is an important factor in animal welfare. Hair or wool cortisol concentrations are considered to be potential long-term indicators of stress experienced by an animal. Using Swifter sheep, we investigated whether ewe parity and litter size affect the wool cortisol concentrations in ewes and their offspring. We hypothesized that multiparous ewes and their offspring would have higher wool cortisol concentrations than primiparous ewes and their offspring, that ewes with larger litters and their offspring would have lower wool cortisol concentrations than ewes with smaller litters and their offspring, that male lambs would have higher wool cortisol concentrations than female lambs, and that the wool cortisol concentrations in the wool of ewes and their lambs would be correlated. Lamb wool grows in utero during the third trimester of pregnancy. In ewes, the shave–reshave method was used so that wool samples from ewes also covered approximately the last trimester of pregnancy. Our study confirmed that litter size affected ewe wool cortisol concentrations: ewes that gave birth to larger litters (i.e., 3 or 4 lambs) had higher wool cortisol concentrations than ewes that gave birth to smaller litters (i.e., 1 or 2 lambs). There was no evidence that the wool cortisol concentrations of the ewes and their lambs were correlated. Neither litter size nor parity of the ewe affected wool cortisol in the lambs. Our study confirms that wool cortisol can be reliably measured in ewes and their newborn lambs, and suggests that it may be useful as a retrospective indicator of stress during the last trimester of pregnancy.

Keywords

wool cortisol, stress, Ovis aries, parity, litter size, sex differences, sheep, livestock welfare

Citation

Zeinstra, E, Vernooij, H, Bentvelzen, M, van der Staay, F J & Nordquist, R 2023, 'Wool cortisol as putative retrospective indicator of stress in ewes during the third trimester of pregnancy, and their newborns : effects of parity and litter size — an exploratory study', Frontiers in Animal Science, vol. 4, 1056726. https://doi.org/10.3389/fanim.2023.1056726