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Lithuanian
Animal Genetic Resources |
Sheeps:
Coarse Wool |

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In
the late XIX c. – early XX c. the most popular sheep breed was
Coarse wool sheep, a breed of low productivity and long maturing
period yet having small demands. There were a few types of them:
Pomeranian, Polish long-tailed, thin-tailed (ovis leptura), and
Northern short-tailed (ovis brachynarė borealis). Long-tailed
sheep, mostly found in Suvalkija, mainly had white covering hair,
while sheep and most of rams were hornless, while Northern
short-tailed, found more often in Vilnius province, had dark,
sometimes even black wool. Their head and leg colour could be
different, most of rams had horns. Quite often sheep also had horns;
they were thinner than long- and thin-tailed sheep. The crossbreeding
process between the above coarse sheep types gradually made the
differences smaller, and in most cases created sheep had mixed
features. One sheep could yield 1-1.5 kg of grey, white, brownish, or
black wool. Sheep weighed 30-40 kg each, and brought forth 2-3 lams.
According to productivity trend, these are meat-wool type sheep with
little flesh and no accumulated fat, with exceptional off-season heat
period.

In
1995 the Lithuanian Institute of Animal Science started forming a herd
of local, almost extinct, Coarse wool sheep. At the moment there are
38 sheep with their productivity factors checked: exterior, weight,
also reproductive, milk, wool, and meat qualities. The major aim is to
form a local sheep herd of non-related and most typical sheep with the
intention to preserve, use and spread the genetic stock of this breed.
So far sheep have been crossed naturally according to the breeding
plan. In 1999 this herd was recognized thoroughbred.
In
Lithuania the unified sheep marking started in late 2001, and included
the remaining local Coarse wool sheep. There are about 100 of the
latter (38 at the Lithuanian Institute of Animal
Science, 15 at Kaunas
Zoological Gardens, 10 at Folk Homestead Museum in Rumšiškės,
30 at farmers farm). Unfortunately, they were never included into herd
books. Besides, sheep herd books have been totally neglected since
1993. Today the Lithuanian Sheep Breeders Association is taking care
about herd books; local sheep will be registered in the future as
well. So far the status of local sheep should be considered
critical-supportive with stable minimal number of sheep.
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