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Dorset Horn

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Dorset Horn
head of a sheep with curved horn and pink nose
Conservation status
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Distribution
  • United Kingdom
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
  • North America
  • South Africa[4]
StandardDorset Horn and Poll Dorset Sheep Breeders' Association
Traits
Weight
  • Male:
    100–125 kg[5]: 800 
  • Female:
    70–90 kg[5]: 800 
Wool colourwhite[6]
Face colourwhite[6]
Horn statushorned in both sexes
Dorset on exhibition at Stampede Park, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The Dorset Horn is an endangered British breed of domestic sheep. It is documented from the seventeenth century, and is highly prolific, sometimes producing two lambing seasons per year. Among British sheep, it is the only breed capable of breeding throughout the winter.[5]: 800 

History

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The Dorset Horn originated in Dorset in south-west England. Like the extinct Pink-nosed Somerset, to which it is related, it probably derived from cross-breeding of Merinos imported from Spain with local tan-faced sheep similar to the modern Portland.[4][5]: 800  Unlike many British lowland breeds, Dorset sheep were not influenced by cross-breeding with the Leicester or Southdown breeds which were much used for this purpose in the latter eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.[5]: 800  A breeders' society, the Dorset Horn Sheep Breeders' Association, was set up in 1891[7] and the first flock book was published in the following year.[8][3]

The Dorset Horn was exported to many countries, among them Australia, South Africa and the United States, where the first arrivals were in the 1860s, and where substantial numbers were imported from about 1880.[5]: 800  The Dorset Horn reached Australia in 1895,[9] and New Zealand in 1897.[10] In 2023 it was reported to DAD-IS by twenty countries in Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania; the largest population reported was that of Denmark, where there were 1191 head.[11]

A polled variant of the breed, the Poll Dorset, was bred in Australia through cross-breeding with the hornless Corriedale and Ryeland breeds. From about 1950, this was introduced to the United Kingdom, where it rapidly supplanted the horned variant;[5]: 800  the breed association changed its name in 1981 to the Dorset Horn and Poll Dorset Sheep Breeder's Association, and registers both breeds.[7] A different polled variant of the breed arose in the United States, derived from a polled sport in a flock kept by North Carolina State University. This Polled Dorset was registered with the breed association – the Continental Dorset Club – from 1956; as elsewhere, it soon became more widespread than the original horned type.[12]

The world-wide conservation status of the Dorset Horn was listed by the FAO as "not at risk" in 2007.[1]: 147  At country level, it is listed as "vulnerable" by the Rare Breeds Trust of Australia,[9] as "priority" by the Rare Breeds Conservation Society of New Zealand,[10] and as "threatened" by the Livestock Conservancy in the USA.[12] In the United Kingdom, where in the 1980s there were more than 100000 breeding ewes,[5]: 800  its status is listed by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as "at risk", meaning that the total number is between 900 and 1500 head.[2]

The Dorset Horn has contributed to the development of several other breeds: the Dorper and Dormer breeds of South Africa, through cross-breeding with the Blackhead Persian and Merinos respectively; and the British Milksheep and Cadzow Improver in the United Kingdom.[5]: 800 [13]

Characteristics

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The Dorset Horn is white-woolled and white-faced; the nostrils are a characteristic pink. It is horned in both sexes, with heavy spiral horns on rams. The fleece is thick, with a weight of 2.25 to 3 kg, a staple length of 80–100 mm, and a Bradford count of 54s–58s.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b Barbara Rischkowsky, Dafydd Pilling (editors) (2007). List of breeds documented in the Global Databank for Animal Genetic Resources, annex to The State of the World's Animal Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. Rome: Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. ISBN 9789251057629. Archived 23 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b Sheep watchlist. Kenilworth, Warwickshire: Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Accessed March 2019.
  3. ^ a b Breed data sheet: Dorset Horn Poll / United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Sheep). Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed May 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Dorset Horn. Kenilworth, Warwickshire: Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Accessed March 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Valerie Porter, Lawrence Alderson, Stephen J.G. Hall, D. Phillip Sponenberg (2016). Mason's World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding (sixth edition). Wallingford: CABI. ISBN 9781780647944.
  6. ^ a b Watchlist: Sheep: Dorset Horn. Kenilworth, Warwickshire: Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Archived 24 June 2008.
  7. ^ a b Dorset Sheep. Dorset Horn and Poll Dorset Sheep Breeder's Association. Accessed March 2019.
  8. ^ Breed description: Dorset Horn/Poll. Department of Animal Breeding and Genetics, School of Veterinary Medicine Hannover. Archived 15 October 2007.
  9. ^ a b Sheep. Abbotsford, Victoria: Rare Breeds Trust of Australia. Accessed March 2019.
  10. ^ a b Dorset Horn Sheep. Canterbury: Rare Breeds Conservation Society of New Zealand. Accessed March 2019.
  11. ^ Transboundary breed: Dorset Horn. Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed May 2023.
  12. ^ a b Dorset Horn Sheep. Pittsboro, North Carolina: The Livestock Conservancy. Accessed March 2019.
  13. ^ [Dormer Sheep Breeders' Society of South Africa] (6 August 2013). Dormer sheep: White wool wonder. The Namibian. Archived 12 August 2013.

Further reading

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