Morphological Characterization of Merino Sheep in Different Agro‐Ecological Zones of Lesotho
Motlalepula George, Morai Johannes Moiloa, Ouko William Odenya, Puleng Matebesi-Ranthimo, Setsomi Molapo, Manyeoe Khatite

TL;DR
This study examines how Merino sheep in Lesotho differ in body measurements across different regions, revealing two distinct strains adapted to specific environments.
Contribution
The study identifies morphological traits that distinguish Merino sheep in different agro-ecological zones, aiding in strain classification and selection.
Findings
Rump length and rump width were the most significant traits differentiating Merino sheep across regions.
The Mahalanobis distance showed the greatest difference between lowlands and the Senqu River Valley.
Principal component analysis revealed distinct morphological patterns in each agro-ecological zone.
Abstract
The Lesotho Merino sheep is a native Merino strain formed from the indigenous fat‐tailed sheep through crossbreeding over many generations. This study is aimed at phenotypically characterizing Merino sheep locally bred in four agro‐ecological zones of Lesotho, facilitating easy selection based on morphological traits. Body weight (BW), body length (BL), withers height (WH), rump height (RH), chest girth (CG), rump length (RL) and rump width (RW) were measured in 2515 mature shorn Merino ewes from four agro‐ecological zones: mountains (n = 1554), the Senqu River Valley (n = 350), lowlands (n = 395) and foothills (n = 216). A multivariate discriminant analysis procedure identified and quantified the traits that differentiate the Merino sheep across these agro‐ecological zones. The structure matrix indicated that RL had the highest loading (0.82) in Function 1, whereas WH (0.6) and head…
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock · Agriculture and Rural Development Research · Livestock and Poultry Management
