| Abattoir |
A slaughterhouse. |
| ADED |
Agriculture Data Element Dictionary. |
| ADIS |
Agriculture Data Interchange Syntax. |
| Adjusted traits |
Traits adjusted to facilitate more meaningful comparisons such as 365 day weights or eye muscle area adjusted to constant weight or age. |
| Ad-libitum feeding |
Feeding to appetite. |
| Age at puberty |
The age at which an individual becomes physiologically capable of sexual reproduction. |
| Alleles |
Alternate forms of genes. Because genes occur in pairs in body cells, one gene of a pair may have one effect and another gene of that same pair (allele) may have a different effect on the same trait. |
| Allelic frequencies |
The frequency with which a particular allele appears among the possible alleles in a population. |
| Animal Breeding |
The practical application of genetic analysis for development of lines of domestic animals suited to human purposes. |
| Animal ID |
The unique identification of an animal. |
| Anus area |
The surface area of an animal observed from the rear of an animal, the area under the tail, around the anus. |
| Artificial insemination |
The technique of placing semen from the male into the
reproductive tract of the female by means other than natural service. |
| ASCII |
American Standard Code for Information Interchange. |
| ASCII file |
American Standard Code for Information Interchange, is a character set (256 characters) and a character encoding based on the Roman alphabet as used in modern English. ASCII codes represent text in computers, in other communications equipment, and in control devices that work with text. |
| Assay |
An assay is a procedure where a property of a system or object is measured. |
| Average daily weight gain |
The total live weight increase between two weight recordings, divided by the number of days between the two weighing records. |
| Average days to lambing |
The number of days from when a ram has access to breeding females to lambing when natural mating exposure is practiced during a breeding season. |
| Base Population |
A group of animals with unknown parents in genetic evaluations, whose EBV's are set to zero, or other group of animals with EBV's set to zero (e.g. those born in a particular year). |
| Behavioural trait |
Behavioural traits are traits, such as docility, which describe the way in which an animal behaves, with regard to humans, other animals and during specific activities such as calving or feeding. |
| Beta-agonist |
A bronchodilator medicine that opens the airways by relaxing the muscles around the airways. |
| Birth weight |
The weight of a lamb taken within 24 hours after birth. |
| Body Condition Scoring |
A scoring procedure which describes the state of fleshing of the animal. |
| Bolus |
A rounded mass inserted in the rumen. Can contain slow release medicine or electronic ID chip. |
| Breech |
The hindquarters of the sheep (around the anus area) |
| Breed |
Animals with a common origin and selection history. Animals within a breed have characteristics that distinguish them from other breeds or groups of animals within that same species. |
| Breeding farms> |
Farms which specialize in the production of animals to be used as sires and dams on other farms which rear animals for animal producing animal products. |
| Breeding population |
A group of organisms of the same species relatively isolated from other groups of the same
species. |
| Breeding value |
The transmissible genetic merit of an individual, or the value of that individual as a parent. |
| Broken mouth |
An animal is described as "broken mouthed" when some of the incisor teeth have fallen out or have become badly worn and irregular, usually the result of old age or hard grazing. |
| Calculated or Derived traits |
Traits derived from recorded traits such as food conversion efficiency. |
| Carcass composition |
The proportions of a connective tissue, bone, muscle and fat in a carcass. |
| Carcass grade |
The relative level of a carcass for certain aspects, such as fatness, colour, maturity and class (e.g. male, female, young, old). |
| Carcass weight |
In the case of no legal definition, carcass weight should be defined as the hot weight of both half carcasses after being bled and eviscerated and after removal of skin, removal of external genitalia, the limbs at the carpus and tarsus, head, tail, kidneys and kidney fats and the udder. |
| Castration |
>Removal of the testicles. |
| Central test |
A comparison conducted at a single or multiple locations where animals are assembled from several flocks to evaluate differences in performance traits under uniform management conditions. |
| Chilling temperature |
As a general rule, chilling temperature is the temperature (10ºC) which lamb should not fall below within 10 hours of slaughter. If these time/temperature conditions are observed, rigor mortis will advance sufficiently to avoid toughening the meat. |
| Clone |
Any organism whose genetic information is identical to that of a "mother organism" from which it was created. |
| Closed flock |
One breeding its own female replacements and purchasing only rams. |
| Code of practice |
The minimum requirements that have to be met in each case to achieve a certain accreditation. |
| Code set |
A set of codes or abbreviations to describe a characteristic such as E,U,R,O,P for carcass conformation. |
| Coefficient of variation |
The coefficient of variation is the standard deviation divided by the mean. It is a unit less quantity indicating the variability around the mean in relation to the size of the mean. |
| Complex traits |
Complex traits are traits that are affected by many genes and pathways. |
| Composite |
A line or breed of sheep developed by the crossing of, and stabilisation of, 2 or more breeds to create a “composite” |
| Conception rate |
Conception rate is the proportion of ewes bred in a flock or in a progeny group, which conceived or were pregnant at a defined stage of gestation (day or interval) or which lambed (lambing percentage). |
| Confiscation |
Seize or remove by authority. |
| Congenital |
A condition that was acquired during prenatal life and therefore exists at or dates from birth. The term is often used in the context of defects present at birth. |
| Contemporary group |
A contemporary group may comprise of animals of the same breed, sex and age range kept under the same or at least similar management conditions. |
| Crutching |
The act of shearing wool from the breech area and hind legs and sometimes the belly. |
| Cryptorchid |
A testicle that fails to descend is called a cryptorchid testicle. An animal in this condition is called a cryptorchid. Testies can be pushed up, creating cryptorchids as a form of castration. |
| Culling |
The process of removing an inferior sheep from a flock (usually based on age, reproductive performance, or health status) |
| Dag score |
A numerical score quantifying the amount of faecal material around the anus area. The scale is from 0 (no dags) to 5 (very daggy) |
| Daily gain |
Rate of gain per day in a defined period. |
| Data elements (DDI) |
Unique and clear definition of each item and code set appearing in the Data Dictionary. |
| Data structure |
The hierarchy of different types of data and the general format in which the data should be recorded and stored. |
| Database |
A collection of information that has been systematically organized for easy access and analysis. |
| Derived trait |
A recorded trait that has been standardized for a given effect such as age or for environmental factors. |
| Diploid zygote |
A single diploid cell resulting from the fusion of male and female gametes at fertilization (sperm and ovum). |
| Dipping |
Immersing the entire sheep in water containing an insecticide to repell and/ or kill ectoparasites. Often done by spraying rather than entire body immersion |
| DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) |
The chemical compound that stores, within each cell, genetic information unique to an individual. |
| DNA genotyping |
The use of the genetic information to establish or confirm the pedigree of an animal. |
|
Treating sheep for internal parasites with an oral dose of deworming medicine. |
| Dressing percentage |
Dressing percentage describes the percent ratio between carcass weight and the live weight taken immediately before slaughter. |
| Dual identification |
The identification of an animal, using visual and other forms of identification such as electronic. |
| Dual Purpose Breed |
Sheep that have been bred and selected for the economic production of both wool and meat. |
| Dystocia |
See lambing difficulty. |
| Ear mark |
To mark the sheep’s ear in a way that allows identification either for performance record or signifies a number. Usually involves taking out a piece of the ear in a certain location(s). |
| Ectoparasites |
Those parasites that live on the outside of other animals. |
| EDI |
International Electronic data interchange protocol. |
| Electrical stimulation |
A slaughter technique which prevents cold-shortening. It involves transmitting pulses of electric current through carcasses in the early post-slaughter period. These pulses cause a very rapid fall in pH which accelerates rigor mortis so that cooling can commence without the danger of cold-shortening. |
| EMA |
Eye Muscle Area. |
| Embryo transfer |
Removing fertilized ova (embryos) from one ewe (the donor),
generally in response to hormone-induced superovulation, and placing these embryos into other ewes (the recipients). |
| Embyrotomy |
The cutting of the fetus while in the uterus to aid its removal when delivery is impossible by natural means. |
| Empty weights |
Anima weight when it consumes no feed or water for minimum 4 hours prior to weighing. |
| Entities |
Data objects, that are composed of a set of data elements (items and code sets), describe the contents and the structure of records that are transmitted according to ADIS rules. |
| Entity tables |
Tables of data objects. |
| Environmental effects |
Effects which influence the performance of an animal which are not genetic in origin. |
| EPD |
Expected Progeny Difference. |
| Estimated Breeding Value (EBV)> |
A measure of an animal’s genetic merit for a given trait. |
| E-U-R-O-P |
EU carcass conformation system. |
| Ewe |
Female sheep of any age |
| Eye Muscle Area |
Cross sectional area of the longissimus dorsi muscle. It is usually is measured between the 12th -13th ribs of the ribbed carcase. |
| FEC |
Faecal Egg Counting – the act of counting gastrointestinal parasite eggs per gram of faecal matter in. Used to predict the level of worm burden in animals and predict the breeding values for worm resistance. |
| Feed Efficiency |
The ratio of nutrient input to lamb output. |
| Feed intake |
The amount of feed consumed by an animal. |
| Female reproductive performance |
Refers to a females capacity to produce developing embryos and also to her capacity to give birth to a live lamb and to ensure a proper postnatal maternal environment for normal lamb growth. |
| Finishing Farm |
The farm or facility where an animal completes its growing and finishing phase before slaughter. |
| Fixed and random effects |
When a sample exhausts the population, the corresponding variable is fixed; when the sample is a small (i.e., negligible) part of the population the corresponding variable is random. |
| Flushing |
The practice of conditioning ewes before breeding by turning them to better pasture or feeding small amounts of grain. Flushing is done to increase the ovulation rate. |
| Fly strike |
The condition produced by the development of blowfly maggots on the living sheep (Cutaneous myiasis). |
| Founder animal |
The earliest know ancestor of an animal. |
| Functional longevity |
Longevity corrected for performance. Culling for low productivity is disregarded since performance is used as a different selection criterion. Only culling for health problems or other non-production causes is taken into account. |
| Gametes |
Mature germ cells |
| Gene interactions |
The collaboration of several different genes in the production of one phenotypic character. |
| Gene introgression |
Introduction of a single gene to an existing breed by crossing to a new breed, and then backcrossing to the origional breed for several generations. |
| Generation interval |
Average age of parents when the offspring destined to replace
them are born. It should be computed separately for male and female parents. |
| Genetic defects |
A genetic defect is a disease or disorder that is inherited genetically. |
| Genetic evaluation |
The prediction of breeding values. |
| Genetic proofs |
The breeding value of an animal as determined by a recognised genetic evaluation procedure. |
| Genetic variance |
The portion of phenotypic variance resulting from the presence of different genotypes in the population. |
| Genetic groups |
Groups of animals with unknown parents. Groups are formed according to age (year born), country of origin and/or breed composition (if more than one breed is included). |
| Genetic markers |
A genetic marker is an allele, DNA marker or cytogenetic marker used as a probe to keep track of an individual, a tissue, a cell, a nucleus, a chromosome, or a gene. |
| Genotype |
The two alleles present at a locus in an individual. For example at the scrapie locus there is the potential for 5 possible alleles and combinations of these. An example of the two alleles present at the scrapielocus in an individual may be ARR/ AHQ. |
| Gestation length |
The number of days between known conception date and
subsequent lambing date. |
| Growth promoting implants |
Chemicals that lead to increased muscle accretion in ruminants. |
| Health traits |
Traits that relate to the health of an animal. |
| Heat (oestrous) synchronization |
Causing a group of ewes or hoggetss to initiate oestrous cycles at approximately the same time through hormonal manipulation. |
| Heterosis (hybrid vigor) |
Amount by which the average performance for a trait in
crossbred lambs exceeds the average performance of the two or more purebreds that were mated in that particular cross. |
| Hogget |
A young male sheep or maiden ewe having no more than two permanent incisors in wear |
| Indicator traits |
Traits that do not have direct economic importance, but aid in the prediction of economically important traits. |
| INGO |
International non-governmental organisation. |
| Gastrointestinal parasites |
Parasites that live inside other animals (in sheep these are commonly worms) |
| International Agreement of Recording Practice |
The title of the ICAR animal recording rules. |
| Intramuscular fat |
Intramuscular fat (marbling) is the intermingling or dispersion of fat within the lean. |
| Invariant data |
Data that is constant, such as an animals date of birth. |
| ISO |
International Organization for Standardization. |
| Johne’s Disease |
Mycobacterium paratuberculosis): A bacterial disease causing severe weight loss and sometimes diarrhea. |
| Lactation |
The period of lamb nursing between birth and weaning. |
| Lamb |
A young sheep that is less than one year old |
| Lambing |
Ewes giving birth to a lamb |
| Lambing difficulty (Dystocia) |
Abnormal or difficult labor, causing difficulty in delivering
the fetus and/or placenta. |
| Lambing ease score |
A numerical score quantifying lambing ease, ranging from an easy, unassisted lambing through to an abnormal presentation. |
| Lambing percentage |
The number of lambs successfully reared in a flock compared with the number of ewes that have been mated – effectively a measure of the success of lambing and the number of multiple births. |
| Lean Meat |
Meat with the connective tissue limits, but free of visible fat. |
| Libido |
Sex drive. In rams, the propensity to detect and mate estrous females. |
| Life history |
Life history refers to the full cycle of an animal’s reproductive and productive flock life. |
| Linear scoring |
The visual assessment of an animal for one or more morphological characteristics using a linear scale which represents the biological extremes in the population of animals under consideration (used in beef cattle in Ireland). |
| Link Sire |
A sire with descendents in two or more contemporary groups. |
| Live finish weights |
Live weight collected at time of harvest or slaughter. |
| Liver fluke |
Small leaf-shaped organisms that rolls up like a scroll in the bile ducts or liver tissue. |
| Live weight gain |
The weight gained between two weight measurements during an animals life divided by time between the measurements in units (e.g. days). |
| Locus |
The specific location of a gene on a chromosome. |
| Longevity |
Duration of life. |
| Maintenance energy requirement |
The amount of feed energy required per day by an animal to maintain its body weight and support necessary metabolic functions. |
| Management group |
Group of animals managed together. |
| Marbling |
The specks of fat (intramuscular fat) distributed in muscular tissue. Marbling is usually evaluated in the rib eye between the 12th and 13th rib. |
| Marker Assisted Selection (MAS) |
The use of genetic markers to select for specific alleles at linked QTLs and therefore specific traits. |
| Mating ability |
Physical ability of a ram to complete a service. |
| Maturity |
An estimation of the physiological age of the animal or carcass. |
| Mature weight |
The weight of the animal at maturity. This is normally collected at approximately 18-months of age (first mating if this is at two-tooth age) for ewes. |
| Mean |
The average value of a set of numbers. |
| Measured traits |
The trait recorded on the animal. |
| Meat quality |
Refers to palatability, appearance, nutritional value and food safety. |
| Meat yield |
The percentage of lean meat in the lamb carcass as obtained by dissection. |
| Metabolic body size |
The weight of the animal raised to the 3/4 power (W0.75); a value indicative of the feed required to meet metabolic needs and maintain current body weight. |
| Metritis |
Inflammation of the womb. |
| Microsatellites |
A region of the genome where the same sequence of base pairs is repeated several times, end to end. |
| Mitosis |
The process in cell division by which the nucleus divides, typically in four stages (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase) resulting in two new nuclei, each of which has exactly the same chromosome and DNA content as the original cell. |
| Mob |
A group of sheep that have been run under exactly the same conditions for the entire growing season. |
| Multiple Ovulation and Egg Transfer (MOET) |
A series of reproductive techniques including superovulation of a donor female, mating, recovery of the resulting embryos, and transfer of fresh or frozen embryos to recipient females. |
| Muscle Depth |
The ultrasonic measurement of eye muscle depth. |
| Mutton |
The meat from sheep older than 12 months of age. |
| Net Feed Efficiency (NFE) |
Refers to the difference in animals feed intake independent of requirements for growth rate and body weight. |
| Net Feed Intake (NFI) |
The trait calculated by phenotypic adjustment of feed intake for body weight and growth as a measure of NFE. |
| Nominal classification |
Occurs where observations are recorded in discrete, unordered classes, like breed or reason for disposal. |
| Non-genetic effects |
Effects which influence the performance of an animal which are not genetic in origin. |
| Notch |
See ear mark |
| NSIS |
National Sheep Identification System |
| Oestrus |
Period of sexual receptivity. |
| OIE |
International Office of Epizooties. |
| Oocytes |
Immature ova. |
| Ordinal scale |
A number which defines a thing (trait) in a standard scale. |
| Organogenesis |
The production of organ systems during animal embryogenesis. |
| Ovine |
Pertaining to sheep |
| Ovulation |
Release of the female germ cell (egg or ovum) by the ovary. Ewes generally ovulate several hours (up to 20 hours) after the end of oestrus or standing heat. |
| Ovum Pick Up technique (OPU) |
Collection of eggs from donors through an ultrasonically guided needle inserted into the ovary. |
| Parentage testing |
The exclusion of relationship when an animal has a genotype inconsistent to a putative relationship. |
| Parturition |
The act of giving birth. |
| Pedigree |
A tabulation of names of an individual's ancestors, usually only those of the three to five closest generations. Pedigree information is used to establish genetic relationships among individuals to use in genetic evaluations. |
| Peer-to-peer system |
(P2P) Computer network that relies on the computing power and bandwidth of the participants in the network rather than concentrating it on a relatively few number of servers. |
| Performance data |
The record of the individual animal for reproduction, production, or carcass merit. |
| Performance testing |
The systematic collection of comparative production information on an individual. |
| Performance traits |
An alternative term used to describe recorded traits. |
| pH |
Degree of acidity or alkalinity. |
| Phenotype |
The set of observable characteristics of an animal. |
| Polled |
Naturally hornless |
| Polygenic |
A trait controlled by many genes and their interactions. |
| Polymorphism |
The existence of two or more alleles at a gene locus in a population. |
| Postpartum |
After the birth of an individual. |
| Postpartum interval |
The number of days between parturition and the first postpartum oestrus. |
| Post-weaning growth |
Growth from weaning to yearling. |
| Predictor trait |
A trait that can be measured easily on an animal and which is highly correlated to a relevant production trait. An example is scrotal circumference in the case of male fertility. |
| Preweaning gain |
Weight gained between birth and weaning. |
| Primiparous |
Female giving birth for first time. |
| Productive flock life |
The period of time between the start of production and the end of productive life. |
| Progeny |
The young, or offspring, of the parents. |
| Progeny Test |
The evaluation procedure of an animal based on the performance of its progeny. |
| Prolificacy |
Tendency to produce many offspring |
| Puberty |
The age at which the reproductive organs become functionally operative and secondary sex characteristics begin to develop. |
| QTL |
Quantatitive trait loci, a locus affecting the phenotypic variation in continuously varying traits like skin color, weight, etc. |
| Quality assurance |
Standardised methods to assure a defined level of quality. |
| Raddle |
Paint or crayon applied to a ram's chest to mark females he mates. |
| Ram |
Male (not castrated) sheep of any age |
| Recorded trait |
Traits actually recorded on the animal. |
| Relative economic value |
The amount by which net income to the sheep enterprise
will change, per unit change in genetic merit for a trait. |
| Reproductive status |
Describes the standing of the animal in respect of its breeding
cycle/status. |
| Rib eye area |
Area of the longissimus muscle measured at the 12th rib interface on the sheep forequarter. |
| Rib Fat Thickness |
The thickness of fat measured at a location on the live animal using ultarasound. A common site assessed in a number of countries is located ¾ of the distance from the medial to the dorsal end of the longissimus dorsi at a lateral point between the 12th and 13th rib. |
| Room temperature |
Room temperature, in laboratory reports, is taken to be roughly 21–23 degrees Celsius (70–73 degrees Fahrenheit), or 294–296 kelvins. The "standard" room temperature is 22 °C (72 °F or 295 K). |
| Scrapie |
A potentailly fatal brain disease in sheep |
| Scrotal circumference |
A measure of testes size obtained by measuring the distance
around the testicles in the scrotum with a circular tape. Related to semen producing capacity and age at puberty of female sibs and progeny. |
| Selection |
Choosing some individuals and rejecting others as parents of the next generation of offspring. |
| Selection differential |
The difference between the average for a trait in selected sheep and the average for that same trait of the group from which they came. The expected response to selection for a trait is equal to selection differential times the heritability of the trait. |
| Selection intensity |
The selection differential measured in phenotypic standard
deviation units of the selected trait. It is inversely proportional to the proportion of available replacements actually selected to be parents of the next generation. |
| Sensory taste panel |
A trained sensory taste panel is skilled in scoring specific attributes of eating quality, independently of other sensory dimensions. |
| Sex limited traits |
Traits, such as milk production, that are expressed in only one sex. |
| Shearing |
Removing the wool from a sheep. |
| Shearling |
Male, female or castrated sheep from first to second shearing. |
| Sheep Ireland ID |
The unique identification scheme adopted for the lifetime identification of animals involved in performance recording with Sheep Ireland (is based on modified NSIS protocols) |
| Shrunk weight |
Weight after fasting for a defined length of time. |
| SNP markers |
These are a single nucleotide polymorphisms located throughout the genome. |
| SQL converter programme |
(Commonly expanded to Structured Query Language) is the most popular computer language used to create, modify and retrieve data from relational database management systems. |
| Standard deviation |
Standard deviation is a statistical measure of spread or variability. |
| Store lamb |
A lamb purchased in from another producer that is short of slaughter weight, with the aim of finishing it. |
| Subjective score |
Classifies animals, using a finite ordinal scale, into one of a
number of possible classes. |
| Tail docking |
The removal of the tail from a lamb either by application of a rubber ring, knife, or docking iron. |
| Teaser |
An aproned or vasectomized animal used to indicate which females are in oestrus. |
| The longissimus dorsi |
Forms the eye of meat seen when chops and steaks are cut from the posterior rib region and loin. |
| Threshold model |
Statistical procedure for analyzing traits that are expressed in an all-or-none fashion (e.g. alive versus dead) but that probably are affected by environmental factors and by genes at many loci. When genetic predictions are conducted for such traits using the threshold model, resultant estimated breeding values reflect the expected proportion of an individual's progeny that will, versus will not, express the trait. |
| Two-tooth |
A sheep of either sex from about 1 year to 1 ½ years old and showing two permanent incisor teeth. Sheep usually get 2 adult front teeth every 12 months for the first 4 years of life; after this they are then known as full-mouthed sheep. |
| Trait code |
A standard abbreviation used to represent a trait such as WW for weaning weight. |
| Ultrasonic measurements |
A non-invasive method used to estimate carcass characteristics and reproductive events. It operates off the principle that sound waves echo differently with different densities of tissue. |
| UN/EDIFACT |
International EDI standard developed under the United Nations. The acronym stands for United Nations/Electronic Data Interchange For Administration, Commerce, and Transport. |
| Vacuum package |
Vacuum packaging refers to packaging in containers (rigid or flexible), from which substantially all air has been removed prior to final sealing of the container. |
| Warner-Bratzler shear force |
A measure of meat tenderness. |
| Wean |
To separate nursing offspring from their dams so that they no longer receive milk. |
| Weaning weight |
Weight collected at the time the lamb is weaned. |
| Weight per day of age |
Weight of an individual divided by its age in days. |
| Wether |
Castrated male. |
| XML |
Standard internet data interchange protocol. |
| Yearling weight |
Live weight at 365 days of age. |