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Texel Sheep: Characteristics, Meat Quality and Production
April 6, 2026Knowing the productive and reproductive parameters of sheep is essential for evaluating the performance of your flock, setting realistic targets, making informed management decisions and identifying animals that are underperforming. This guide presents the key reference values you need as a producer.

Reproductive Parameters in Sheep
Puberty and First Breeding
- Puberty in ewe lambs: 5–10 months of age (varies by breed — meat breeds earlier, wool breeds later)
- Recommended age at first mating: 7–10 months, or when ewe lamb reaches 60–65% of adult body weight
- Puberty in ram lambs: 5–7 months
- Recommended age at first use of ram: 8–12 months
Estrus and Breeding Season
- Estrous cycle length: 14–19 days (average 17 days)
- Duration of estrus: 24–36 hours
- Ovulation: Occurs 12–24 hours after the onset of estrus
- Breeding season (temperate breeds): Autumn–winter (short-day breeders — triggered by decreasing photoperiod)
- Tropical and hair breeds: Year-round polyestrous — breed in any season
- Ram:ewe ratio (natural service): 1 ram per 30–40 ewes (young rams) or 1:50–60 (experienced rams)
Gestation and Lambing
- Gestation length: 144–152 days (average 147 days)
- Prolificacy (lambing rate): Varies by breed and management
- Hair breeds (Dorper, Katahdin, Santa Ines): 150–200%
- Meat breeds (Suffolk, Hampshire): 140–175%
- Wool breeds (Merino, Corriedale): 100–140%
- High-prolificacy breeds (Romanov, Finn): 200–300%
- Perinatal lamb mortality: Target below 5%; acceptable below 10%
- Pre-weaning lamb mortality: Target below 8%

Growth and Meat Production Parameters
Birth and Growth
- Birth weight:
- Single lambs: 4–6 kg
- Twins: 3–4.5 kg each
- Triplets: 2.5–3.5 kg each
- Weaning age: 60–90 days (60 days in intensive systems; 90 days in extensive)
- Weaning weight: 12–20 kg (depends on breed, litter size and nutrition)
- Average daily gain (ADG):
- Pre-weaning: 150–300 g/day
- Post-weaning on pasture: 100–200 g/day
- Post-weaning in feedlot: 250–400 g/day
- Feed conversion ratio (FCR) in feedlot: 4–6 kg feed per kg live weight gain
Slaughter Data
- Slaughter weight:
- Light lambs (lechale/milk lamb): 8–14 kg live weight
- Medium lambs: 25–35 kg live weight
- Heavy lambs: 40–55 kg live weight
- Dressing percentage: 44–54% (higher for meat breeds, lower for wool breeds)
- Age at slaughter: 3–6 months for light/medium lambs; up to 12 months for heavy lambs
- Ideal slaughter age: When daily gain starts to decline and fat deposition increases — typically at 60–70% of expected adult weight
Milk Production Parameters
- Meat breeds (for lamb rearing only): 1–2 liters/day (enough for twins)
- Dual-purpose breeds (Corriedale, Manchega): 100–200 liters per lactation
- Dairy breeds (Frisona Milchschaf, East Friesian, Lacaune): 400–800 liters per 180-day lactation
- Butterfat content of sheep milk: 5–8% (much higher than cow milk)
- Protein content of sheep milk: 4.5–6%
- Lactation length (dairy breeds): 150–240 days
Wool Production Parameters
- Annual fleece weight:
- Merino ewes: 3–6 kg greasy; rams: 5–10 kg greasy
- Corriedale: 3–5 kg
- Rambouillet: 4–6 kg
- Down breeds (Suffolk, Hampshire): 2–4 kg
- Fiber diameter:
- Fine wool (Merino): 15–22 microns
- Medium wool (Corriedale, Rambouillet): 22–30 microns
- Coarse wool (Down breeds): 28–35 microns
- Staple length: 70–120 mm per year (shearing once annually)
- Shearing frequency: Once or twice per year

Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for Sheep Operations
Use these KPIs to benchmark your operation and identify areas for improvement:
- Lambs weaned per ewe mated: Target 1.2–1.6 (depends on breed and system)
- Kg of lamb weaned per ewe per year: Target 25–45 kg in meat systems
- Reproductive rate (% ewes that lambed / ewes mated): Target above 90%
- Empty rate (% ewes that did not become pregnant): Target below 5%
- Lamb survival to weaning: Target above 90%
- Annual culling rate: Typically 15–25% of the ewe flock replaced each year
Recording these parameters for every animal in your flock with OvinApp allows you to automatically calculate KPIs, identify which ewes are consistently productive and which should be culled — turning data into better management decisions and higher profitability.

