Twin sets of lambs were randomly allocated to one of six treatments: (1) lambs born and managed on ryegrass-clover-based pasture until conventional weaning approximately at 99 days of age (Grass-Grass); (2) lambs born on ryegrass-clover-based pasture and early weaned onto a herb-clover mix at ~45 days of age (Grass-Herb); (3) lambs born on ryegrass-clover-based pasture, transferred with their dam onto a herb-clover mix at ~45 days of age until conventional weaning (Grass-Herb); (4) lambs born on ryegrass-clover-based pasture, transferred with their dam onto a herb-clover mix at ~15 days of age and early weaned onto a herb-clover mix at ~45 days of age (Grass-Herb); (5) lambs born and managed on herb-clover mix until conventional weaning (Herb-Herb); (6) lambs born on herb-clover mix and weaned early onto a herb-clover mix at ~45 days of age (Herb-Herb). In both years, Herb-Herb lambs had greater ( < 0.05) growth rates than lambs in other treatments. The liveweight gains and rumen papillae development of Herb-Herb, Grass-Herb and Grass-Herb lambs did not differ ( > 0.05). The weight of the empty digestive tract components at either early weaning or conventional weaning did not differ ( > 0.05) between treatments. Exposing early-weaned lambs to the herb mix for a prolonged period, prior to early weaning, does not improve their subsequent growth.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7459600PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10081354DOI Listing

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