Difference between revisions of "Sheep" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Sheep}}<br />{{Template:StatusDomesticated}}
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{{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Sheep}}<br />
{{Taxobox_image | image = [[image:Flock of sheep.jpg|250px|Flock of sheep]] | caption = [[Romney sheep]] ([[Images of sheep|More]])}}
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{{Taxobox_image | image = [[image:Ovis canadensis 2.jpg|250px|Bighorn Sheep]] | caption = Bighorn sheep}}
 
{{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
 
{{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
 
{{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Animal]]ia}}
 
{{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Animal]]ia}}
 
{{Taxobox_phylum_entry | taxon = [[Chordate|Chordata]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_phylum_entry | taxon = [[Chordate|Chordata]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[mammal|Mammalia]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_classis_entry | taxon = [[mammal|Mammalia]]}}
{{Taxobox_ordo_entry | taxon = [[Artiodactyla]]}}
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{{Taxobox_ordo_entry | taxon = [[Ungulate#Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates|Artiodactyla]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_familia_entry | taxon = [[Bovidae]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_familia_entry | taxon = [[Bovidae]]}}
 
{{Taxobox_subfamilia_entry | taxon = Caprinae}}
 
{{Taxobox_subfamilia_entry | taxon = Caprinae}}
{{Taxobox_genus_entry | taxon = ''Ovis''}}
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{{Taxobox genus entry | taxon = '''''Ovis'''''}}<br/>{{Taxobox authority | author = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = 1758}}
{{Taxobox_species_entry | taxon = '''''O. aries'''''}}
 
 
{{Taxobox_end_placement}}
 
{{Taxobox_end_placement}}
{{Taxobox_section_binomial | color = pink | binomial_name = Ovis aries | author = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = 1758}}
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{{Taxobox section subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Species}}
{{Taxobox_end}}
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''O. aries'' (domestic sheep) <br/>
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''O. canadensis'' (bighorn sheep) <br/>
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''O. dalli'' (dall sheep) <br/>
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''O. musimon'' or ''O. ammon musimon''<br/> (European mouflon) <br/>
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''O. nivicola'' (snow sheep) <br/>
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''O. orientalis'' (Asiatic mouflon) <br/>
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''O. vignei'' (urial) <br/>
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''O. ammon'' (argali) <br/>
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{{Taxobox end}}
  
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A '''sheep''' is an individual of any of the [[#Wool|wool]]ly [[mammal]] [[species]] that comprise the genus '''''Ovis.''''' All sheep are [[ungulate#Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates|even-toed ungulates]] (hoofed mammals) and members of the [[bovid]] family ( Bovidae), along with [[goat]]s, [[antelope]]s, [[bison]], [[buffalo]], and [[cattle]]. Domestic sheep (''Ovis aries'') were one of the first [[animal]] species domesticated by [[human]]s and have had an important role in human life for thousands of years. There are also several species of wild sheep.
  
}}The '''domestic sheep''' (''Ovis aries''), the most common species of the '''sheep''' genus ([[Ovis]]), is a woolly [[ruminant]] [[quadruped]] which probably descends from the wild [[mouflon]] of south-central and south-west [[Asia]]. Sheep breeders refer to female sheep as '''''ewes''''', intact males as '''''rams''''', [[Castration|castrated]] males as '''''wethers''''', yearlings as '''''hoggets''''', and younger sheep as '''''lambs'''''. In sheep husbandry, a group of sheep is called a ''[[Herd|flock]]'' or ''[[mob]]''.  See other specialised vocabulary below.
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Sheep are usually stockier than other bovines and some have horns that are more divergent than those of goats. Sheep have scent glands on the face and hind feet. They have a four-chambered stomach, which plays a vital role in digesting, regurgitating, and re-digesting food.
  
==Etymology==
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Domestic sheep are important for their [[#wool|wool]], [[milk]], and meat (which is called mutton or lamb).
  
[[Modern English]] "''sheep''" comes from [[Old English]] "''sceap''", ultimately from Common West Germanic "''*skæpan''", and within the Indo-European languages, unique to West Germanic languages. North and East [[Germanic languages]] use word with a different root, and most [[Indo-European languages]] use a term related to "''ewe''" for "''sheep''".
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Male sheep are called '''rams,''' females are called '''ewes,''' and the young are called '''lambs.''' Males are sometimes also called "bucks" or "tups." The adjective applying to sheep is ''ovine'' and the collective terms for sheep are ''flock'' and ''mob.'' The term ''herd'' also is occasionally used in this sense.
  
==Cultural significance==
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[[Image:Flock of sheep.jpg|left|150px|Flock of domestic sheep]]
  
[[Image:Sheep eating grass edit02.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Australian Sheep]]
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==Wild sheep==
  
Sheep have had associations with many cultures, especially in the [[Mediterranean]] area and [[Britain]], where they form the most common type of [[livestock]] in [[pastoralism]]. [[Selective breeding]] of sheep has frequently occurred and in [[Egyptian Mythology]] the ram was the symbol of [[Heryshaf]].
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Wild sheep are mostly found in hilly or mountainous habitats. They are fairly small compared to other [[ungulate]]s; in most species, adults weigh less than 100 kg (220 lbs) (Nowak 1983). Their diet consists mainly of [[grass|grasses]], as well as other [[plant]]s and lichens. Like other bovids, their digestive system enables them to digest and live on low-quality, rough plant materials. Sheep conserve water well and can live in fairly dry environments. Their bodies are covered by a coat of thick hair to protect them from cold. The coat contains long, stiff hairs, called kemps, and a short woolly undercoat, called fleece, which grows in fall and is shed in spring (Clutton-Brock 1999).
  
A wide [[symbology]] relates to sheep in ancient art, traditions and culture. [[Judaism]] uses many sheep references including the [[Passover]] lamb. [[Christianity]] uses sheep-related images, such as: [[Christ]] as the good shepherd, or as the [[Sacrificial lamb|sacrificed]] Lamb of God ([[Agnus Dei]]); the [[bishop]]'s ''Pastoral''; the lion lying down with the lamb (a reference to all of creation being at peace, without suffering, predation or otherwise). Greek Easter celebrations traditionally feature a meal of Paschal lamb. Sheep also have considerable importance in [[Arab]] culture, with [[Eid ul-Adha]] being a major festival in [[Islam]] when a sheep is sacrificed yearly.
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Wild sheep are social animals and live in groups, called flocks. This helps them to avoid predators and also helps them stay warm in bad weather by huddling together. Flocks of sheep need to keep moving to find new grazing areas and more favorable climate as the seasons change. In each flock, there is a sheep, usually a mature ram, that the others follow as a leader (Clutton-Brock 1999).
  
Herding sheep plays an important historico-symbolic part in the [[Jew]]ish and [[Christianity|Christian]] [[faith]]s, since [[Abraham]], [[Jacob]], [[Moses]], and [[King David]] all worked as [[shepherd]]s.
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In wild sheep, both rams and ewes have horns, with the rams' horns being much larger. The horns of a mature bighorn ram can weigh 14 kg (30 lbs), as much as the rest of its bones put together. Rams use their horns to fight with each other for dominance and for the right to mate with females. In most cases, they do not injure each other because they hit each other head to head and their curved horns do not strike each other's bodies. They are also protected by having very thick skin and a double-layered skull (Voelker 1986).
  
The ram is the first sign of the Western [[zodiac]], in which it is known as ''[[Aries (astrology)|Aries]]''. The sheep (or [[goat]]) also forms one of the animals associated with the 12-year cycle of in the [[Chinese zodiac]], related to the [[Chinese calendar]]. Chinese tradition associates each animal with certain personality traits. See: [[Sheep (Zodiac)]].
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Wild sheep have very keen senses of sight, smell, and hearing. When detecting predators, wild sheep most often flee, usually uphill to higher ground. However they can also fight back. The dall sheep has been known to butt [[wolf|wolves]] off the face of cliffs (Voelker 1986).
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[[Image:Mufflon-02.jpg|thumb|left|European mouflon]]
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There are some differences of opinion among experts on how wild sheep should be divided and named as species. One group of sheep species consists of the bighorn sheep (''Ovis canadensis'') and dall sheep (''O. dalli'') of western [[North America]] and the closely related snow sheep (''O. nivicola'') of [[Siberia]]. Another group is more closely related to domestic sheep and includes the Asiatic mouflon (''O. orientalis''), which is thought to be the ancestor of domestic sheep, the urial (''O. vignei''), which also might have contributed to domestic sheep ancestry, and the argali (''O. ammon''). These three species are native to central and western [[Asia]], with the Asiatic mouflon living in the mountains of [[Turkey]] to southern [[Iran]], the urial from northeastern Iran to northwestern [[India]], and the argali in inner Asia ([[Tibet]], [[Himalayas]], Atlay Mountains, etc.)
  
The raising of sheep for wool and meat became a major industry in colonial [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]] and remains significant. As a result, sheep and [[sheep shearing]] have become an important part of the folklore and cultural tradition of these two countries. In New Zealand, sheep outnumber the human population 12 to 1.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.teara.govt.nz/NewZealandInBrief/Society/1/en| publisher=[['Society', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand]]| year=09 June, 2006| title=The people of New Zealand}}</ref>
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The European mouflon (''O. musimon'') is found on the islands of [[Corsica]] and [[Sardinia]] in the [[Mediterranean Sea]]. It is thought to be descended from an early population of domestic sheep brought there by humans in prehistoric times (Clutton-Brock 1999; Huffman 2006; Nowak 1983).
  
Sheep are often associated with obedience due to the widespread perception that they lack [[intelligence (trait)|intelligence]] and their undoubted [[herd mentality]], hence the pejorative connotation of the adjective 'ovine'. In [[George Orwell]]'s satirical novel ''[[Animal Farm]]'', sheep are used to represent the ignorant and uneducated masses of revolutionary [[Russia]]. The sheep are unable to be taught the subtleties of revolutionary ideology and can only be taught repetitive slogans such as "Four legs good, two legs bad" which they bleat in unison at rallies. The rock group [[Pink Floyd]] wrote a song using [[Sheep (song)| sheep]] as a symbol for ordinary people, that is, everyone who isn't a pig or dog. People who accept overbearing governments have been pejoratively referred to as "sheeple."
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==Domestication==
 
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[[Image:Sheep in mountain pasture.jpg|thumb|Grazing sheep with range scientist]]
==Breeds==
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The domestic sheep is thought to be descended from the wild mouflon of central and southwest Asia (the Asiatic mouflon, ''O. orientalis''). [[DNA]] analysis suggests there are two ancestral sources for the genetic makeup of domestic sheep, but a second subspecies contributor has not been identified. The urial has a higher number of [[chromosome]]s (58) than the domestic sheep (54), making it an unlikely ancestor, although it interbreeds with the mouflon. The argali sheep has 56 chromosomes and the Siberian snow sheep has 52 chromosomes.
[[Image:A_sheep_on_a_railway_track.jpg|thumb|left|A sheep in a railway track in [[Mount Barker, South Australia]].]]
 
There are many [[List of sheep breeds|breeds of sheep]], but these are generally sub-classable as [[wool]] class, hair class and [[Lamb (food)|sheep meat]] breeds.
 
 
 
Farmers develop wool breeds for superior wool quantity and quality (fineness of fibers), wool [[Staple (textiles)|staple]] length and degree of [[crimp (wool)|crimp]] in the fiber. Major wool breeds include [[Merino]], [[Rambouillet (sheep)|Rambouillet]], [[Romney_sheep|Romney]] and [[Lincoln (sheep)|Lincoln]]. [[Drysdale]] is a sheep bred specifically for [[carpet]] wool.
 
 
 
Breeds of meat sheep include [[Suffolk (sheep)|Suffolk]], [[Hampshire (sheep)|Hampshire]], [[Dorset (sheep)|Dorset]], [[Columbia (sheep)|Columbia]], and [[Texel (sheep)|Texel]].
 
 
 
Breeders of dual-purpose wool class sheep concentrate on fast growth, multiple births, ease of lambing and hardiness.  An easy-care sheep is the [[Coopworth]] that has long wool and good lamb meat production qualities.  Another dual-use breed is the [[Corriedale (sheep)|Corriedale]]. Sometimes sheep are used for both purposes equally and cross-breeding is practiced to maximise both outputs. For example, [[Merino]] ewes providing wool may be crossed with [[Suffolk (sheep)|Suffolk]] rams to produce lambs which are robust and suitable for the meat market.  
 
 
 
The [[Finnish Landrace]] sheep has a reputation for multiple births.
 
 
 
Hair class sheep are the original class of sheep in the world, developed for meat and leather. They are prolific and highly resistant to disease and parasites. Dorpers and Kahtahdins are composite breeds of wool and hair crosses with different degrees of wool/hair mixes within the hair class. True hair sheep such as [[St. Croix]], [[Barbados Blackbelly]], [[Mouflon]], [[Santa Inez]] and [[Royal White]] shed their protective down fiber to an all hair coat in the Spring/Summer. Hair class sheep are becoming more popular for their no-shear aspects.
 
 
 
==Economic importance==
 
{{Agricultural production box
 
|year= 2005
 
|animal= Sheep and Lamb
 
|country1= {{PRC}}
 
|amount1=170.9
 
|country2= {{AUS}}
 
|amount2=102.7
 
|country3= [[Image:European flag.svg|25px]] [[European Union]] (15 nation)
 
|amount3=99.3
 
|country4= [[Image:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg|25px]] former [[Soviet Union]]
 
|amount4=65.3
 
|country5= {{IND}}
 
|amount5=62.5
 
|country6= {{IRN}}
 
|amount6= 54.0
 
|country7= {{SUD}}
 
|amount7= 49.0
 
|country8= {{NZL}}
 
|amount8= 39.9
 
|country9= {{GBR}}
 
|amount9= 35.3
 
|country10= {{RSA}}
 
|amount10= 25.3
 
|world=1079.0
 
}}
 
 
 
Raising sheep occupied many farmers in ancient economies, given that this animal can give [[milk]] (and all its derivative products, such as [[cheese]]), [[wool]], [[Sheepskin (material)|sheepskin]] (used for making [[footwear]], rugs and other coverings) and [[meat]]. In the 21st century, sheep retain considerable importance in the economies of several countries. After [[China]], the largest producers of sheep are in the southern hemisphere: [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]] and the [[Patagonia|Patagonian]] regions of [[Argentina]], [[Uruguay]] and [[Chile]].
 
Other countries may produce a very small proportion of the world market, but sheep nonetheless play an important role in their economy. In some places, like [[Sardinia]], sheep-breeding has become the principal and characteristic activity.
 
  
In the UK, the importance of the wool trade was so significant that in the upper chamber of parliament (the [[House of Lords]]), the [[Lord Chancellor]] sits on a bench known as the [[Woolsack]]. This is, as its name suggests, a sack of wool and confers the importance of the wool trade to the English economy at the time of its installation many centuries ago.
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The process of domestication of sheep seems to have started about 10,000 years ago in southwestern Asia, with some evidence for domestication dating to 9000 <small>B.C.E.</small> in [[Iraq]] (Kreb and Krebs 2003). It is not known how sheep came to be associated with humans. It has been suggested that humans followed wild sheep flocks, killing some when they needed meat but also protecting them from other predators. It is also possible that sheep preferred to stay near human settlements to eat crops or weeds that grew nearby, or to lick the salt found in human urine, or because predators would avoid humans. It is also possible that hunters sometimes found newborn lambs and brought them home to keep as pets (Clutton-Brock 1999).  
  
The economic importance of sheep in much of the [[United States]] has declined as it has become, in some cases, economically unviable to ranch sheep for wool.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://208.33.45.21/archive/story.cfm?path=2006/q2/May/22/20060522-NEWS_LOCAL-7369204.htm&criteria=sheep%20industry| publisher=San Angelo Standard-Times| year=22 May, 2004| title=Shear Artisans}}</ref> [[Texas]] has by far the most sheep of any state,<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.usda.gov/nass/aggraphs/sheep4.htm| publisher=[[National Agricultural Statistics Service]]| year=28 January, 2005| title=Top Five Sheep & Lamb Producing States}}</ref> but now has only about one-tenth<ref>{{cite web| url=http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/reports/nassr/livestock/pgg-bb/shep0106.txt| publisher=[[National Agricultural Statistics Service]]| year=27 January, 2006| title=Sheep and Goats}}</ref> of the almost 11 million sheep it had in the 1940s.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/SS/aus1.html| publisher=[[Handbook of Texas|Handbook of Texas Online]]| year=26 February, 2004| title=Sheep Herding}}</ref>
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An important factor in their domestication seems to be that sheep started to relate to humans as their flock leaders. This made it possible for a single shepherd to control a large flock of sheep. [[Dog]]s were also used to help control and protect the flocks. Because sheep can thrive in dry or hilly country that is not suited for crops, the keeping of flocks gave early human communities an important additional resource. Ewes began to be milked and the fleece that sheep shed each spring was gathered and spun into yarn to make clothing.
  
Even in the 21st century, in some situations, sheep can provide a return on investment of up to 400% of their cost annually (including reproduction gains). Sheep breeding has played a role in several historic conflicts, such as the Scottish [[Highland Clearances]], the American [[range war]]s, and the English "[[Enclosure|enclosing]] of the commons".
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Shepherds would select the sheep with the most desirable characteristics to give each year's new lambs and sheep slowly changed under domestication. They became smaller, slower, and calmer than their wild ancestors. Different breeds arose depending on different environmental conditions and standards of selection. In most breeds, ewes became hornless.
  
==Domestication==
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==Modern sheep==
[[Image:Sheep in mountain pasture.jpg|thumb|Grazing sheep]]
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[[Image:Sheep eating grass edit02.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Australian sheep]]
Domestic sheep are descended from the [[mouflon]] that is found from the mountains of [[Turkey]] to southern [[Iran]]. Evidence for domestication dates to [[9th millennium B.C.E.|9000 B.C.E.]] in [[Iraq]].<ref>{{cite book | author=Krebs, Robert E. & Krebs, Carolyn A | title=Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions & Discoveries of the Ancient World | location=Westport, CT | publisher=Greenwood Press | year=2003 | id=ISBN 0-313-31342-3}}</ref> It has been found by [[DNA]] analysis to be one of two ancestors of domestic sheep. Although the second ancestor has not been identified, both the [[urial]] and [[argali]] have been ruled out.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12028771&dopt=Abstract |title= Molecular analysis of wild and domestic sheep questions current nomenclature and provides evidence for domestication from two different subspecies. |author= Hiendleder S, Kaupe B, Wassmuth R, Janke A. |month= May 7 |year=2002 |publisher= Proceedings. Biological sciences, The Royal Society of London.|accessmonthday= August 2|accessyear= 2006}}</ref>  The [[urial]] (''O. vignei'') is found from northeastern Iran to northwestern India. It has a higher number of [[chromosome]]s (58) than domestic sheep (54) which makes it an unlikely ancestor of the latter, but it interbreeds with the mouflon. The [[argali]] sheep (''O. ammon'') of inner Asia (Tibet, Himalayas, [[Altay Mountains]], [[Tien-Shan]] and [[Pamir Mountains|Pamir]]) has 56 chromosomes and the Siberian [[snow sheep]] (Ovis nivicola) has 52 chromosomes.
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There are now 200 to 300 or more breeds of sheep (Voelker 1986, OSU 2003). Those bred mainly for [[#wool|wool]] include Merino, Rambouillet, Romney, and Lincoln. Drysdale is a sheep bred specifically for carpet wool. Breeds of meat sheep include Suffolk, Hampshire, Dorset, Columbia, and Texel. Hair class sheep resemble the original domesticated breeds and are useful for meat and leather. They are prolific and highly resistant to [[disease]] and [[parasite]]s.
[[Image:Lamb with tail.jpg|thumb|left|Lambs are born with long tails which are cut off once they reach a certain age.]]
 
Evidence of early domesticated sheep have been found in [[PPNB]] [[Jericho]] and [[Zawi Chemi Shanidar]]. The fleece-bearing sheep are only found since the [[Bronze Age]]. Primitive breeds, like the Scottish [[Soay sheep]] have to be plucked (a process called rooing), instead of sheared, as the kemps are still longer than the soft fleece, or the fleece must be collected from the field after it falls out. The European mouflon (''O. musimon'') found on [[Corsica]] and [[Sardinia]] as well as the Cretan and the extinct Cypriot wild sheep are possibly descended from early domestic sheep that turned feral.
 
  
==Cuisine==
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In the twentieth century, the invention of artificial fibers took away some of the market for wool, although it is still very important and remains the most popular fiber for cold weather clothing. Sheep hides with the fleece still attached are an important item and are used for coats, boots, rugs, and other products.  
{{seealso|lamb (food)}}
 
Chefs and diners commonly know sheep [[meat]] prepared for food as [[Lamb (food)|'''lamb''' or '''mutton''']] (compare the [[French language|French]] word for "sheep": ''mouton'').
 
  
Ewes' milk is used in the production of [[cheese]] and [[yogurt]] in many upland parts of the world. Well known sheepmilk cheeses include the [[Roquefort (cheese)|Roquefort]] of France, the [[brocciu]] of [[Corsica]], the [[Pecorino Romano cheese|pecorino]] of [[Italy]] and the [[feta (cheese)|feta]] cheese of [[Greece]]. Sheepmilk contains no [[lactose]], and thus does not trigger [[lactose intolerance]] in humans. [http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/cgi-bin/nut_search.pl]
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The production and consumption of sheep meat, called mutton if from mature sheep and lamb if from young ones, is declining in the [[United States]], but is increasing in [[China]] due to improved economic conditions. In [[India]] and the [[Middle East]], [[religion|religious]] restrictions on the eating of the meat of [[cattle]] and [[pig]]s also contribute to growing sheep meat consumption (Miller 1998).
  
Sheep [[testicles]], sometimes euphemistically called prairie oysters, are considered a delicacy in many parts of the world.
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Ewes' milk is used in the production of [[cheese]] and yogurt in many parts of the world. Well-known sheep milk cheeses include the Roquefort of [[France]], the Brocciu of [[Corsica]], the Pecorino of [[Italy]], and the Feta cheese of [[Greece]].
  
== Behaviour ==
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The world population of sheep in 2005 was just over one billion. [[China]] has about 170 million sheep, most of which are raised for meat. [[Australia]], with about 100 million, and [[New Zealand]], with about 50 million (much more than their human population), dominate the world export trade in sheep products. Large numbers of sheep are also found in other [[Asia]]n countries, [[Europe]], [[Africa]], and [[South America]] (Miller 1998).
[[Image:Two Sheep in Chile.jpg|right|thumb|Two sheep in [[Santiago de Chile|Santiago]], [[Chile]]]]
 
  
[[Image:Happy_Sheep.jpg|right|thumb|222px|Sheep graze on green pasture lands at the edge of [[Giants Causeway]] in [[Northern Ireland]].]]
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==Wool==
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[[Image:Tom Roberts - Shearing the Rams.jpg|thumb|250px|left|''Shearing the Rams,'' painting by Australian artist Tom Roberts (1856–1931)]]
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[[Wool]] is the fiber derived from the [[fur]] of animals of the Caprinae subfamily, which includes sheep and [[goat]]s. However, the [[hair]] of certain species of other mammals, such as [[alpaca]]s and [[rabbit]]s, may also be called wool.
  
[[Image:sheep.jpg|right|thumb|222px|Sheep mating, called tupping.]]
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Wool has two qualities that distinguish it from other types of hair or fur: it has scales that overlap like shingles on a roof and it is crimped; in some fleeces of domestic sheep the wool fibers have more than 20 bends per inch. Fleece is the name for the woolen coat after it has been sheared from the animal, but before it has been processed.  
  
[[Image:Sheep_in_Serbia.jpeg|right|thumb|A flock of sheep in Serbia]]
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Historically, in some breeds of sheep, the fleece was not shed in spring, but grew year-round and was cut off, or shorn, usually once a year in the spring; producing the material wool. As sheep herding spread over [[Asia]] and [[Europe]], wool became one of the most commonly used fibers for clothing and a very important product in commerce and trade. Wool's scaling and crimp make it easier to spin and felt (matting, condensing, and pressing) the fleece. Those characteristics help the individual fibers attach to each other so that they stay together. Because of the crimp, wool fabrics have a greater bulk than other [[textile]]s and retain air, which causes the product to retain heat. Insulation also works both ways; [[Bedouin]]s and [[Tuareg]]s of the North African desert use wool clothes to keep out the heat.
Some breeds of sheep exhibit a strong [[flocking]] behaviour. This was used as an example to Israelites in the [[Christian]] [[Bible]] to instruct them to obey their [[shepherd]], or [[Slaveholder|master]]. Flocking behaviour is advantageous to non-predatory animals; the strongest animals fight their way to the center of the flock which offers them great protection from predators. It can be disadvantageous when food sources are limited and sheep are almost as prone to overgrazing a pasture as goats. In [[Iceland]], where sheep have no natural predators, and grasses grow slowly, none of the various breeds of sheep exhibit a strong flocking behaviour.
 
  
Sheep flocking behaviour is so prevalent in some [[England|English]] breeds that special names apply to the different roles sheep play in a flock. One calls a sheep that roams furthest away from the others an ''outlier'', a term originally used to refer to someone who lives far from where they work. This sheep ventures further away from the safety of the flock to graze, due to a larger [[flight zone]] or a weakness that prevents it from obtaining enough [[forage]] when with the flock. Another sheep, the [[bellwether]], leads the others. Traditionally this was a castrated ram (or ''wether'') with a ''bell'' hung off a string around its neck. The tendency to act as an outlier, bellwether or to fight for the middle of the flock stays with sheep throughout their adulthood; that is unless they have a scary experience which causes them to increase their [[flight zone]].
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The amount of crimp corresponds to the thickness of the wool fibers. A fine wool like merino may have up to a hundred crimps per inch, while the coarser wools like karakul may have as few as one to two crimps per inch. Hair, by contrast, has little if any scale and no crimp and thus little ability to bind into yarn. On sheep, the hair part of the fleece is called kemp. The relative amounts of kemp to wool vary from breed to breed, and make some fleeces more desirable for spinning, felting, or carding into batts for quilts or other insulating products.
  
According to a spokesperson of the British National Sheep Association, "Sheep are quite intelligent creatures and have more brainpower than people are willing to give them credit for."<ref>{{cite web| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3938591.stm| publisher=BBC News| year=30 July, 2004| title=Crafty sheep conquer cattle grids| accessdate=2006-04-29}}</ref> For example, sheep in [[Yorkshire]], [[England]] found a way to get over [[cattle grid]]s by rolling on their backs. A study published in ''National Geographic'' (December 8) showed a sheep can remember the faces of fifty other sheep for over two years.
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Wool is generally a creamy white color, although some breeds of sheep produce natural colors such as black, brown (also called moorit), and gray.
  
Sheep can become [[hefted]] to one particular pasture so they do not roam far from home. Since the outbreak of [[foot and mouth disease]] in the [[United Kingdom]], transplanted sheep have had to be trained to stay in their grazing area.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/1634526.stm| publisher=BBC News| year=3 November, 2001| title=Sheep taught to stay put| accessdate=2006-04-29}}</ref>
+
Wool straight off a sheep has a high level of grease, which contains valuable lanolin, as well as dirt, dead skin, sweat residue, and vegetable matter. This state is known as "grease wool" or "wool in the grease." Before the wool can be used for commercial purposes it must be scoured, or cleaned. In less processed wools, vegetable matter may be removed by hand, and some of the lanolin left intact through use of gentler detergents. This semi-grease wool can be worked into yarn and knitted into particularly water-resistant mittens or sweaters, such as those of the Aran Island fishermen. Lanolin removed from wool is widely used in the cosmetics industry.
  
==Glossary==
+
==Sheep in religion==
This is a glossary of terms that relate to ''sheep'' and ''domestic sheep''. Note that some terms have localised meanings, and may be used only in one geographical region, or may mean slightly different things in different areas.
+
[[Image:Stained glass Agnus Dei.jpg|right|thumb|Christ depicted as ''Agnus Dei,'' the Lamb of God]]
*'''Chevon''' &mdash; [[goat]] meat. A term used mainly in [[Eastern countries]].
+
Sheep are common symbols in [[culture]] and [[religion]]. In [[Catal Huyuk]] in ancient Turkey, clay heads of rams, along with heads of bulls, are found in shrines 8,000 years old (Budlansky 1992). The [[ancient Egypt]]ian fertility god Heryshaf was depicted as a man with the head of a ram. In [[China|Chinese]] [[Buddhism]], the ram was one of the animals that attended the birth of [[Buddha]] and is honored by being one of the signs of the Chinese zodiac. The ram Aries, is also one of the signs of the Western zodiac.
*'''Cryptorchid''' &mdash; a male sheep that has its testes pushed into its kidney cavity to have infertility but with increased production of lean meat due to testosterone.
 
*'''Ewe''' &mdash; a female sheep, capable of producing lambs.
 
*'''Hoggett''' (or '''Hoggatt''') &mdash; a sheep which by virtue of its age and development is no longer a lamb, but not yet '''mutton'''. esp. in relation to meat breeds.
 
*'''Lamb''' &mdash; a young sheep, generally unweaned. In many Eastern countries, there is a less strict definition of lamb which may include older hoggetts. Also used to refer specifically to the [[Lamb (food)|meat]] of such a sheep.
 
*'''Mutton''' &mdash; an older female sheep to be used for meat. Also used to refer specifically to the [[Mutton|meat]] of such a sheep. May refer to [[goat]] meat in eastern countries. Derived from the French word '''Mouton''' (sheep).
 
*'''Ram''' (also called a '''tup''') &mdash; a male sheep.
 
*'''Old-season lamb''' &mdash; a lamb a year old or more.
 
*'''Ovine''' &mdash; member of the [[genus]] '''''Ovis'''''.
 
*'''Slink''' &mdash; a very young lamb.
 
*'''Sucker''' &mdash; an unweaned lamb.
 
*'''Teg''' &mdash; a sheep in its second year.
 
*'''Wether''' &mdash; a castrated male sheep.
 
  
==See also==
+
The three Abrahamic religions, [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]], developed in the sheepherding areas of the [[Middle East]] and sheep and sheepherding play important parts in all three. According to the [[Bible]], [[Abraham]], [[Jacob]], [[Moses]], and [[David]] all worked as shepherds. In Judaism, lamb is traditionally eaten at [[Passover]] to commemorate the Hebrews' escape from Egypt. Abraham's sacrifice of a ram, which was substituted for his son, is commemorated by Muslims each year in the festival of ''Eid ul-Adha.'' Sheep are mentioned symbolically in the Bible many times; perhaps most famously in Psalm 23, which begins "The Lord is my shepherd." In Christianity, shepherds attended the birth of [[Jesus]], and he is referred to as the Good Shepherd and the Lamb of God.
*[[Blue tongue disease]]
 
*[[Dolly the sheep]]
 
*[[Fat-tailed sheep]]
 
*[[Icelandic sheep]]
 
*[[Guard Llama]], used as livestock guardians
 
*[[Lamb (food)]]
 
*[[List of sheep breeds]]
 
*[[Ovis]] (sheep genus)
 
*[[Scrapie]]
 
*[[Sheep husbandry]]
 
*[[Sheep shearing]]
 
*[[Sheepskin (material)|Sheepskin]]
 
*[[Shepherd]]
 
*[[Wool]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<!--See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref(erences/)> tags—>
 
<references/>
 
 
== External links ==
 
{{Commons|Ovis aries}}
 
* {{cite web|url=http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/sheep|work=Oklahoma State University|title=Breeds of Livestock - Sheep: (Ovis aries)|accessdate=2006-08-02}}
 
* {{dmoz|Business/Agriculture_and_Forestry/Livestock/Sheep/|Sheep}}
 
* [http://www.biol.lu.se/cellorgbiol/phylogeny/AxelJanke/PAPER/sheep2.pdf Genetic origins of domestic sheep]
 
* [http://www.dutchtexels.co.uk Dutch Texel Sheep]
 
* [http://www.sheep101.info/index.html SHEEP 101 .info]
 
* [http://www.nationalsheep.org.uk/education/Chapter_11.pdf#search=%22sheep%20heft%22 A Glossary of sheep terms] (National Sheep Association)
 
* [http://www.tumbledownfarm.com/texts/DS/DS_I.html The Domestic Sheep] by Henry Stewart (1898), "Natural History" and "Anatomy."
 
 
==Further reading==
 
*Juliet Clutton-Brock. ''A natural history of domesticated animals'' (London 1987).
 
* Journal of Heredity. 1998 Mar-Apr;89(2):113-20. ''Analysis of mitochondrial DNA indicates that domestic sheep are derived from two different ancestral maternal sources: no evidence for contributions from urial and argali sheep.'' Hiendleder S, Mainz K, Plante Y, Lewalski H.
 
  
{{credit|85623832}}
+
*Budiansky, S. 1992. ''The Covenant of the Wild.'' New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0688096107
 +
*Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. ''A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals.'' Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521634954
 +
*Huffman, B. 2006. [http://www.ultimateungulate.com The Ultimate Ungulate Page.] Retrieved January 13, 2007.
 +
*Krebs, R. E., and C. A. Krebs. 2003. ''Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions and Discoveries of the Ancient World.'' Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-31342-3
 +
*Miller, S. 1998. [http://www.fas.usda.gov/dlp2/circular/1998/98-10LP/sheep3.htm Sheep and Goats.] United States Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service. Retrieved January 13, 2007.
 +
[[Image:Faroe stamp 036 ram.jpg|right|thumb|Ram on stamp from the Faroe Islands]]
 +
*Nowak, R. M., and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. ''Walker's Mammals of the World.'' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801825253
 +
*Oklahoma State University (OSU). 2003. [http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/sheep Breeds of Livestock: Sheep.] Retrieved January 13, 2007.
 +
*Parker, D. 2001. ''The Sheep Book.'' Athens: Ohio University Press. ISBN 0804010323
 +
*Voelker, W. 1986. ''The Natural History of Living Mammals.'' Medford, NJ: Plexus Publishing. ISBN 0937548081
  
 +
{{credit3|Domestic_sheep|85623832|Ovis|81843861|Wool|100030729}}
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 +
[[Category:Animals]]
 +
[[Category:Mammals]][[Category:Ungulates]]

Latest revision as of 21:23, 6 October 2022

Sheep
Bighorn Sheep
Bighorn sheep
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Bovidae
Subfamily:: Caprinae
Genus: Ovis
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

O. aries (domestic sheep)
O. canadensis (bighorn sheep)
O. dalli (dall sheep)
O. musimon or O. ammon musimon
(European mouflon)
O. nivicola (snow sheep)
O. orientalis (Asiatic mouflon)
O. vignei (urial)
O. ammon (argali)

A sheep is an individual of any of the woolly mammal species that comprise the genus Ovis. All sheep are even-toed ungulates (hoofed mammals) and members of the bovid family ( Bovidae), along with goats, antelopes, bison, buffalo, and cattle. Domestic sheep (Ovis aries) were one of the first animal species domesticated by humans and have had an important role in human life for thousands of years. There are also several species of wild sheep.

Sheep are usually stockier than other bovines and some have horns that are more divergent than those of goats. Sheep have scent glands on the face and hind feet. They have a four-chambered stomach, which plays a vital role in digesting, regurgitating, and re-digesting food.

Domestic sheep are important for their wool, milk, and meat (which is called mutton or lamb).

Male sheep are called rams, females are called ewes, and the young are called lambs. Males are sometimes also called "bucks" or "tups." The adjective applying to sheep is ovine and the collective terms for sheep are flock and mob. The term herd also is occasionally used in this sense.

Flock of domestic sheep

Wild sheep

Wild sheep are mostly found in hilly or mountainous habitats. They are fairly small compared to other ungulates; in most species, adults weigh less than 100 kg (220 lbs) (Nowak 1983). Their diet consists mainly of grasses, as well as other plants and lichens. Like other bovids, their digestive system enables them to digest and live on low-quality, rough plant materials. Sheep conserve water well and can live in fairly dry environments. Their bodies are covered by a coat of thick hair to protect them from cold. The coat contains long, stiff hairs, called kemps, and a short woolly undercoat, called fleece, which grows in fall and is shed in spring (Clutton-Brock 1999).

Wild sheep are social animals and live in groups, called flocks. This helps them to avoid predators and also helps them stay warm in bad weather by huddling together. Flocks of sheep need to keep moving to find new grazing areas and more favorable climate as the seasons change. In each flock, there is a sheep, usually a mature ram, that the others follow as a leader (Clutton-Brock 1999).

In wild sheep, both rams and ewes have horns, with the rams' horns being much larger. The horns of a mature bighorn ram can weigh 14 kg (30 lbs), as much as the rest of its bones put together. Rams use their horns to fight with each other for dominance and for the right to mate with females. In most cases, they do not injure each other because they hit each other head to head and their curved horns do not strike each other's bodies. They are also protected by having very thick skin and a double-layered skull (Voelker 1986).

Wild sheep have very keen senses of sight, smell, and hearing. When detecting predators, wild sheep most often flee, usually uphill to higher ground. However they can also fight back. The dall sheep has been known to butt wolves off the face of cliffs (Voelker 1986).

European mouflon

There are some differences of opinion among experts on how wild sheep should be divided and named as species. One group of sheep species consists of the bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) and dall sheep (O. dalli) of western North America and the closely related snow sheep (O. nivicola) of Siberia. Another group is more closely related to domestic sheep and includes the Asiatic mouflon (O. orientalis), which is thought to be the ancestor of domestic sheep, the urial (O. vignei), which also might have contributed to domestic sheep ancestry, and the argali (O. ammon). These three species are native to central and western Asia, with the Asiatic mouflon living in the mountains of Turkey to southern Iran, the urial from northeastern Iran to northwestern India, and the argali in inner Asia (Tibet, Himalayas, Atlay Mountains, etc.)

The European mouflon (O. musimon) is found on the islands of Corsica and Sardinia in the Mediterranean Sea. It is thought to be descended from an early population of domestic sheep brought there by humans in prehistoric times (Clutton-Brock 1999; Huffman 2006; Nowak 1983).

Domestication

Grazing sheep with range scientist

The domestic sheep is thought to be descended from the wild mouflon of central and southwest Asia (the Asiatic mouflon, O. orientalis). DNA analysis suggests there are two ancestral sources for the genetic makeup of domestic sheep, but a second subspecies contributor has not been identified. The urial has a higher number of chromosomes (58) than the domestic sheep (54), making it an unlikely ancestor, although it interbreeds with the mouflon. The argali sheep has 56 chromosomes and the Siberian snow sheep has 52 chromosomes.

The process of domestication of sheep seems to have started about 10,000 years ago in southwestern Asia, with some evidence for domestication dating to 9000 B.C.E. in Iraq (Kreb and Krebs 2003). It is not known how sheep came to be associated with humans. It has been suggested that humans followed wild sheep flocks, killing some when they needed meat but also protecting them from other predators. It is also possible that sheep preferred to stay near human settlements to eat crops or weeds that grew nearby, or to lick the salt found in human urine, or because predators would avoid humans. It is also possible that hunters sometimes found newborn lambs and brought them home to keep as pets (Clutton-Brock 1999).

An important factor in their domestication seems to be that sheep started to relate to humans as their flock leaders. This made it possible for a single shepherd to control a large flock of sheep. Dogs were also used to help control and protect the flocks. Because sheep can thrive in dry or hilly country that is not suited for crops, the keeping of flocks gave early human communities an important additional resource. Ewes began to be milked and the fleece that sheep shed each spring was gathered and spun into yarn to make clothing.

Shepherds would select the sheep with the most desirable characteristics to give each year's new lambs and sheep slowly changed under domestication. They became smaller, slower, and calmer than their wild ancestors. Different breeds arose depending on different environmental conditions and standards of selection. In most breeds, ewes became hornless.

Modern sheep

Australian sheep

There are now 200 to 300 or more breeds of sheep (Voelker 1986, OSU 2003). Those bred mainly for wool include Merino, Rambouillet, Romney, and Lincoln. Drysdale is a sheep bred specifically for carpet wool. Breeds of meat sheep include Suffolk, Hampshire, Dorset, Columbia, and Texel. Hair class sheep resemble the original domesticated breeds and are useful for meat and leather. They are prolific and highly resistant to disease and parasites.

In the twentieth century, the invention of artificial fibers took away some of the market for wool, although it is still very important and remains the most popular fiber for cold weather clothing. Sheep hides with the fleece still attached are an important item and are used for coats, boots, rugs, and other products.

The production and consumption of sheep meat, called mutton if from mature sheep and lamb if from young ones, is declining in the United States, but is increasing in China due to improved economic conditions. In India and the Middle East, religious restrictions on the eating of the meat of cattle and pigs also contribute to growing sheep meat consumption (Miller 1998).

Ewes' milk is used in the production of cheese and yogurt in many parts of the world. Well-known sheep milk cheeses include the Roquefort of France, the Brocciu of Corsica, the Pecorino of Italy, and the Feta cheese of Greece.

The world population of sheep in 2005 was just over one billion. China has about 170 million sheep, most of which are raised for meat. Australia, with about 100 million, and New Zealand, with about 50 million (much more than their human population), dominate the world export trade in sheep products. Large numbers of sheep are also found in other Asian countries, Europe, Africa, and South America (Miller 1998).

Wool

Shearing the Rams, painting by Australian artist Tom Roberts (1856–1931)

Wool is the fiber derived from the fur of animals of the Caprinae subfamily, which includes sheep and goats. However, the hair of certain species of other mammals, such as alpacas and rabbits, may also be called wool.

Wool has two qualities that distinguish it from other types of hair or fur: it has scales that overlap like shingles on a roof and it is crimped; in some fleeces of domestic sheep the wool fibers have more than 20 bends per inch. Fleece is the name for the woolen coat after it has been sheared from the animal, but before it has been processed.

Historically, in some breeds of sheep, the fleece was not shed in spring, but grew year-round and was cut off, or shorn, usually once a year in the spring; producing the material wool. As sheep herding spread over Asia and Europe, wool became one of the most commonly used fibers for clothing and a very important product in commerce and trade. Wool's scaling and crimp make it easier to spin and felt (matting, condensing, and pressing) the fleece. Those characteristics help the individual fibers attach to each other so that they stay together. Because of the crimp, wool fabrics have a greater bulk than other textiles and retain air, which causes the product to retain heat. Insulation also works both ways; Bedouins and Tuaregs of the North African desert use wool clothes to keep out the heat.

The amount of crimp corresponds to the thickness of the wool fibers. A fine wool like merino may have up to a hundred crimps per inch, while the coarser wools like karakul may have as few as one to two crimps per inch. Hair, by contrast, has little if any scale and no crimp and thus little ability to bind into yarn. On sheep, the hair part of the fleece is called kemp. The relative amounts of kemp to wool vary from breed to breed, and make some fleeces more desirable for spinning, felting, or carding into batts for quilts or other insulating products.

Wool is generally a creamy white color, although some breeds of sheep produce natural colors such as black, brown (also called moorit), and gray.

Wool straight off a sheep has a high level of grease, which contains valuable lanolin, as well as dirt, dead skin, sweat residue, and vegetable matter. This state is known as "grease wool" or "wool in the grease." Before the wool can be used for commercial purposes it must be scoured, or cleaned. In less processed wools, vegetable matter may be removed by hand, and some of the lanolin left intact through use of gentler detergents. This semi-grease wool can be worked into yarn and knitted into particularly water-resistant mittens or sweaters, such as those of the Aran Island fishermen. Lanolin removed from wool is widely used in the cosmetics industry.

Sheep in religion

Christ depicted as Agnus Dei, the Lamb of God

Sheep are common symbols in culture and religion. In Catal Huyuk in ancient Turkey, clay heads of rams, along with heads of bulls, are found in shrines 8,000 years old (Budlansky 1992). The ancient Egyptian fertility god Heryshaf was depicted as a man with the head of a ram. In Chinese Buddhism, the ram was one of the animals that attended the birth of Buddha and is honored by being one of the signs of the Chinese zodiac. The ram Aries, is also one of the signs of the Western zodiac.

The three Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, developed in the sheepherding areas of the Middle East and sheep and sheepherding play important parts in all three. According to the Bible, Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and David all worked as shepherds. In Judaism, lamb is traditionally eaten at Passover to commemorate the Hebrews' escape from Egypt. Abraham's sacrifice of a ram, which was substituted for his son, is commemorated by Muslims each year in the festival of Eid ul-Adha. Sheep are mentioned symbolically in the Bible many times; perhaps most famously in Psalm 23, which begins "The Lord is my shepherd." In Christianity, shepherds attended the birth of Jesus, and he is referred to as the Good Shepherd and the Lamb of God.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Budiansky, S. 1992. The Covenant of the Wild. New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0688096107
  • Clutton-Brook, J. 1999. A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521634954
  • Huffman, B. 2006. The Ultimate Ungulate Page. Retrieved January 13, 2007.
  • Krebs, R. E., and C. A. Krebs. 2003. Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions and Discoveries of the Ancient World. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-31342-3
  • Miller, S. 1998. Sheep and Goats. United States Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service. Retrieved January 13, 2007.
Ram on stamp from the Faroe Islands
  • Nowak, R. M., and J. L. Paradiso. 1983. Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801825253
  • Oklahoma State University (OSU). 2003. Breeds of Livestock: Sheep. Retrieved January 13, 2007.
  • Parker, D. 2001. The Sheep Book. Athens: Ohio University Press. ISBN 0804010323
  • Voelker, W. 1986. The Natural History of Living Mammals. Medford, NJ: Plexus Publishing. ISBN 0937548081

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