Can a ram breed his daughter?

The ram may breed his daughters and dam. Undersized ewe lambs may be bred. Because the times of breeding and lambing will not be not known, it will be difficult to properly time vaccinations, supplemental feeding, and other management practices.
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Can you breed dad to daughter sheep?

Inbreeding, Linebreeding, and Linecrossing

Clearly, when you mate one ram to all the ewes in a flock, some inbreeding will naturally occur. Father/daughter crosses will not happen because you will retire a ram after breeding so that he never has a chance to breed his daughters.
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How does inbreeding affect sheep?

The combined effect of lamb and dam inbreeding reduced weaning weight by 3.5, 2.6, and 2.2 kg, which constituted reductions of 10, 7, and 6%, respectively. Reduced weaning weight was approximately 30% as important as reduced net reproduction rate in contributing to the decline in litter weight weaned.
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What is an acceptable inbreeding coefficient in sheep?

Low levels of inbreeding (<6.25%) are often considered an acceptable compromise, and levels higher than that should be avoided. The level of inbreeding is calculated as the probability of for two alleles being identical by descent. This value is called the "inbreeding coefficient".
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Can a ram mount a pregnant ewe?

Some rams may be too aggressive to be kept with pregnant ewes. In less developed countries, they have a created an "apron" to prevent rams from impregnating ewes during comingling.
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Should You Get a Ram for Your Sheep Flock?



How close is considered inbreeding?

Inbreeding is technically defined as the mating of animals more closely related than the average relationship within the breed or population concerned. For practical purposes, if two mated individuals have no common ancestor within the last five or six generations, their progeny would be considered outbreds.
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Can a male goat breed his mother?

Some facts about goat breeding cycles: Male goats can breed as young as 7 weeks old. This doesn't mean that they should be bred, but it's definitely possible for him to get his sister and mother pregnant, so it's important to remove bucks from females at 7 weeks old!
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What happens when siblings mate?

Inbreeding occurs when two closely related organisms mate with each other and produce offspring. The two main negative consequences of inbreeding are an increased risk of undesirable genes and a reduction in genetic diversity.
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Is it OK to breed father and daughter goats?

Occasionally you can breed father/daughter but it's not ideal. Line-breeding goats will accentuate the good qualities- and the bad. If your buck has any negative traits (aggression, mother had low milk production,etc) those traits will be accentuated in his offspring if they are a product of line-breeding.
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How long should a ram stay with ewes?

Rams should be joined with ewes for two 17 day cycles (5 weeks). Extending the joining periods is not recommended on more intensively run farms, as this holds up the completion of important management events such as marking and weaning.
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Can 2 rams live together?

If you plan to keep more than 1 ram on your farm at a time and don't want to or don't have room to keep them in separate areas, you will need to introduce them in a small pen or stall – like a lambing jug (stall). When rams fight for dominance, they back up, then run and headbutt (or ram) each other.
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How many ewes can one ram breed?

Fertile adult rams can serve at least 5 ewes per day, so over a 34 days breeding season (2 full estrus cycles), one ram could theoretically service over 150 ewes.
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Can a ram get a goat pregnant?

Although they are distantly related, it is very uncommon to get a hybrid of a sheep and goat as the two animals do not even have the same number of chromosomes. Only a ram can get a doe pregnant, not the other way around. Most of those pregnancies result in a miscarriage or stillbirth.
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Can I breed my boar to his daughter?

Boar to daughter breeding will concentrate the genetics of the boar. Using the father of the gilt to breed the gilt will make the resulting piglets 75% genetically the boar and 25% genetically their grandmother (the gilt's mom).
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Does inbreeding affect goats?

The chief effect of inbreeding is an increase in homozygosity — an increase in the number of homozygous loci in inbred animals, and an increase in the frequency of homozygous genotypes in an inbred population, e.g. herd or breed.
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What is it called when family members sleeping together?

Incest (/ˈɪnsɛst/ IN-sest) is human sexual activity between family members or close relatives. This typically includes sexual activity between people in consanguinity (blood relations), and sometimes those related by affinity (marriage or stepfamily), adoption, or lineage.
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What happens if you have a kid with your sister?

The risk for passing down a genetic disease is much higher for siblings than first cousins. To be more specific, two siblings who have kids together have a higher chance of passing on a recessive disease to their kids.
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What happens if two twins have a baby?

"[Two sets of] identical twins will not have identical offspring," says Professor Rodney Scott, head of medical genetics at the University of Newcastle. The only way we get identical offspring is when a fertilised egg splits into two cells. "Those identical cells grow into identical twins," says Scott.
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Can you have 2 male goats together?

A Buddy for Your Buck

Because goats are herd animals, a buck should not live alone. A castrated buck, or wether, makes a perfect companion goat for an intact buck. If you own multiple breeding bucks, house bucks of similar age together to avoid injury to older or younger bucks.
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At what age can a goat get pregnant?

Mating. Female goats can begin to be bred when they weigh around 60 lbs. -- typically reached when they are between 7 and 10 months old. Male goats reach puberty between 4 and 8 months and can also be bred between 8 and 10 months old.
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Will male goats hurt baby goats?

Aggressive bucks can injure or kill kids. A goat kid of either gender can be fertile at 7 weeks of age (as early as 4 weeks of age for Nigerian Dwarf goats).
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What is the most inbred family?

Mark Laita first met the Whittaker family - who are widely regarded as America's most famous inbred family - after being granted access to their weird world. The family have little contact with anyone in the outside world and when Laita first attempted to photograph the family, neighbours threatened him.
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Can you breed a father and daughter dog?

Never crossbreed a father dog with its daughter. Although there are chances of having a healthy dog, the risk of ending up with a dog with serious health issues is even greater. Inbreeding reduces the offspring's genetic variability, their life span and makes them more prone to hereditary diseases.
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What are signs of inbreeding?

As a result, first-generation inbred individuals are more likely to show physical and health defects, including:
  • Reduced fertility both in litter size and sperm viability.
  • Increased genetic disorders.
  • Fluctuating facial asymmetry.
  • Lower birth rate.
  • Higher infant mortality and child mortality.
  • Smaller adult size.
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