This article is about the breed of sheep. For the town in Victoria, Australia, see
Merino, Victoria.
Unshorn merino sheep.
The merino is the most numerous breed of sheep in the world. It is a breed
prized for its wool, although more recently the low price of wool has led to more of an emphasis on
the market and sale of the meat of the animal. Super fine merinos are regarded as having the finest and softest wool of any
sheep. Poll merinos have no horns (or very small stubs), and horned merinos
have long, spiral horns which grow close to the head.
Wool
The merino is an excellent grazer and very adaptable. It is bred predominantly for its wool, and
its carcass size is generally smaller than that of sheep bred for meat. The South African Mutton Merino and
Merinofleischschaf have been bred to balance wool production and carcass quality.
Merino wool is tightly crimped and springy. Staples are commonly between 2.5–4 inches
(65–100 mm). A Saxon Merino produces between 3 and 6 kg of unwashed wool a year while a good
quality Peppin Merino ram will produce up to 18 kg of unwashed wool a year. Merino wool is
generally less than 24.5 micrometres (microns, µm) in diameter.
Medium merino wool is between 20.6-22.5 µm, fine medium is between 19.6-20.5 µm, fine is between 18.6-19.5 µm, superfine is
between 17.6-18.5 and ultra fine wool is between 12.5 to 16.9. Ultra fine wool is suitable for blending with other exclusive
fibres such as Silk and Cashmere.
The term "merino" is widely employed in the textile industries with very varied meanings. Originally it was restricted to
denote the wool of the merino sheep reared in Spain, but owing to the superiority of Australian and New Zealand wools the term now has broader use. In the
dress-goods and knitting trades the term "merino" still implies an article made from the very best soft wool.
Regions of merino husbandry
In Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and the western United States where sheep are bred for their wool rather than their mutton, merino sheep dominate. In Australia, the merinos are crossed with
Border Leicesters and other English long wool breeds to produce first cross prime lamb
mothers and prime lamb wethers. The prime lamb mothers are crossed again with Poll Dorsets and
other short wool breeds and the resultant second cross lambs slaughtered as prime lambs .
History
The merino is a productive animal developed by man. The genetic history of the merino is not a linear history of a gene pool
selected over time for superior wool or fleece weights, but a history of outcrossing and the selection of material that is
productive in the local environment. It is a history where genetic material from one era in the breed's development becomes the
foundation material for further development in another era.
The Phoenicians introduced sheep from Asia Minor into
North Africa, and the foundation flocks might have been introduced into Spain as late as
the 12th century by the Beni-Merines, a tribe of Arabic
Moors. In the 13 and 14 century genetic material from England was introduced [1], this influence was openly documented by Spanish writers at the time.
Spain became noted for its fine wool (spinning count between 60s and 64s) and built up
a fine wool monopoly during the 12th and 16th century, with wool commerce to Flanders and
England being a source of income for Castile in the
Late Middle Ages.
Most of the flocks known as cabanas or cavanas were owned by nobility or the church; the sheep grazed the Spanish southern
plains in winter and the northern highlands in summer. The Mesta was an organisation of privileged
sheep owners who developed the breed and controlled the migrations.
The three great studs that founded most of the world's merino flocks were the Royal Escurial flocks, the Negretti and the
Paula. The infantado, Montarcos and Aguires studs had an influence on the Vermont bloodlines.
Before the 18th century the export of merinos from Spain was a crime punishable with death. In the 18th century a new era
began, small exportation of merinos from Spain and local sheep were used as the foundation of merino flocks in other countries.
In 1723 some were exported to Sweden, but the first major consignment of Escurials was sent by Ferdinand VI of Spain to his cousin, Prince Xavier the Elector of Saxony, in 1765. Further exportation of Escurials to Saxony occurred in 1774, to Hungry in 1775 and to Prussia in
1786. Later in 1786 Louis XVI of France received 366 sheep selected from 10
different cavanas, these founded the stud at the Royal Farm at Rambouillet. The
Rambouillet stud enjoyed some 'undisclosed' genetic development with some English long-wool genes contributing to the size and
wool-type of the French sheep [2]. Though Emperor the Rambouillet stud had an enormous influence on the development of the Australian Merino.
Sir Joseph Banks procured two rams and four ewes in 1787 by way of Portugal and in 1792
purchased 40 Negrettis for King George III, to found the royal flock at
Kew. In 1808, 2000 Paulas were imported.
The King of Spain also gave some Escurials to the Dutch government in 1790; these thrived in the Dutch Cape Colony (South
Africa). In 1797 Governor King, Colonel Patterson, Captain Waterhouse and Kent purchased sheep from the widow of Colonel Gordon,
commander of the Dutch garrison in Cape Town. When Waterhouse landed in Sydney he sold his sheep to Captain John Macarthur, Samuel Marsden and
Captain William Cox.
In 1804 John Macarthur (who had been sent back from Australia to England following a duel with Colonel Patterson) brought
seven rams and one ewe from the first dispersal sale of King George III stud. In 1805 Macarthur and the sheep returned to
Australia, Macarthur to reunite with his wife Elizabeth who had been developing
their flock in his absence. Macarthur is considered the father of the Australian Merino industry however in the long term his
sheep had very little influence on the development of the Australian Merino.
From 1765 the Germans in Saxony crossed the Spanish merino with the Saxon sheep [3] to developed a dense, fine type of merino (spinning count between 70s and 80s) adapted to its new
environment. By 1802 the region had 4 million Saxon Merino Sheep, and was becoming the center for stud merino breeding, and
German wool was the finest in the world.
In 1802, Colonel David Humphreys, United States Ambassador to Spain,
initiated the Vermont strain into North America with an importation of 21 rams and 70 ewes from Portugal and a further
importation of 100 infantado merinos in 1808. The British embargo on wool and wool clothing exports to the USA prior to the
1812 British/USA war led to a "Merino Craze" with William Jarvis of the Diplomatic Corps
importing at least 3500 [4] sheep between 1809 to
1811 through Portugal.
The Napoleonic wars (1793-1813) almost destroyed the Spanish Merino industry. The old
cavanas were dispersed or slaughtered. From 1810 onwards the Merino scene shifted to Germany, the United States and Australia.
Between 1810 and 1840 Australia was engaged in a wool trade war with Germany while importing German sheep. By 1840 Australia had
won the war mainly because of Germany's preoccupation with fineness.
By 1801 Australia had 33,818 sheep. Macarthur pioneered the introduction of Saxon Merinos with importation from the Electoral
flock in 1812. The first Australian wool boom occurred in 1813 when the Great Dividing
Range was crossed. By 1830 the Australian sheep population was nearly 2 million. In 1823, at the first sheep show held in
Australia, a gold medal was awarded to W. Riley ('Raby') for importing the most
Saxons, W. Riley also imported Cashmere Goats into Australia.
In 1841, John Murray at Mt Crawford in South Australia established a flock of Camden-blood ewes mated to Tasmanian rams. To
broaden the wool and give the animals some size it is thought some English Leicester
blood was introduced. The resultant sheep were the foundation of many South Australian strong wool studs.
The Peppin brothers took a different approach to producing a hardier, longer stapled, broader wool sheep. After purchasing
Wanganella Station in the Riverina they selected 200 station bred ewes that thrived under local
conditions and purchased 100 south Australian ewes bred at Cannally that were sired by an imported Rambouillet ram. The Peppin
brothers mainly used Saxon and Rambouillet rams importing four Rambouillet rams in 1860. One of these, 'Emperor,' cut an 11.4 kg
(5.1Kg clean) fleece. They ran some Lincoln ewes but their introduction into the flock
is undocumented.
In the 1880s, Vermont rams were imported into Australia from the USA, since many Australian studmen believed these sheep would
improve wool cuts, their use spread rapidly. Unfortunately the fleece weight was high but the clean yield low, the greater grease
content increased the risk of fly strike, they had lower uneven wool quality, and lower lambing percentages. Their introduction
had a devastating effect on many famous fine-wool studs.
In 1889, while Australian Stud's where being devastated by the imported Vermont rams several USA merino breeders formed the
Rambouillet Association to prevent the destruction of the Rambouillet line in the
USA. It has been estimated that today 50% of the sheep on the USA western ranges are of Rambouillet blood. [4]
The federation drought ( 1901-1903 ) reduced the number of Australian sheep from 72 to 53 million and ended the Vermont era
with the Peppin and Murray blood strain becoming dominant in the pastoral and wheat zones of Australia.
In Australia today, a few Saxon fine wool merino studs exist in the high rainfall areas (17 micron to 20 micron), in the pastoral and Agriculture country Peppins and
Collinsville (21 to 24 micron) are popular. In the drier areas one finds the Collinsville (21 to 24 micron) strains. The
development of the merino is entering a new phase, objective fleece measurement and estimated breeding
values are now being used to identify exceptional animals. Artificial
insemination and embryo transfer is being used to accelerated the spread of their
genes. The result is a wide out crossing between all major strains.
Animal welfare developments
Mulesing of Merino sheep is a common practice in Australia, and has been attacked by
animal rights and animal welfare activists with
PETA recently running a campaign against the practice. The
PETA campaign targeted U.S. consumers by using graphic billboards in New York City. PETA threatened U.S. manufacturers with
television advertisements showing their companies' support of mulesing. Fashion retailers
Abercrombie & Fitch Co., Gap Inc and
Nordstrom and George (UK) stopped stocking Merino wool products. New strains of merinos that
don't require mulesing are being promoted in South Australia. 'Thin-skinned' sheep from western
Victoria are also being promoted as a solution. [5]
Etymology
There are two proposed origins[6] for the
Spanish word:
- Merino may be an adaptation to the sheep of the name of a Castilian
official inspector (merino) over a merindad, who may have also inspected sheep
pastures. This word is from the medieval Latin majorinus, a steward or head official of a village, from major,
meaning great.
- Merino may from the name of a Berber tribe, the Marini (or in
Castilian, Benimerines), which intervened in the Iberian peninsula during the 12th and 13th centuries.
See also
References
- ^ "Wool". The New American Cyclopaedia
16. (1858). D. Appleton and Company. 538. Retrieved on 2006-09-30.
- ^ Paterson, Mark (1990).
National Merino Review. West Perth, Australia: Farmgate Press, 12-17. ISSN 1033-5811.
- ^ "Agriculture". Icenographic Encyclopedia
of Science 4. (1860). D. Appleton and Company. 731. Retrieved on 2006-09-30.
- ^ a b Ross, C.V. (1989). Sheep
production and Management. Engleworrd Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 26-27. ISBN 0-13-808510-2.
- ^ Scientists search for
bare-bum sheep gene. Australian Broadcaster commission. Retrieved on 2008-10-06.
- ^ Merino in Diccionario Crítico Etimológico Castellano e
Hispánico, vol. IV, eds. Joan Corominas & José A. Pascual, Gredos, Madrid, 1989. ISBN 84-249-0066-9
- Cottle, D.J. (1991). Australian Sheep and Wool Handbook. Melbourne,
Australia: Inkata Press, 20-23. ISBN 0-909605-60-2.
External links
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