Research update
Trained ovines chomp on weeds, avoid vines
To most vineyard managers, any plants growing directly under grapevines are nasty weeds that can rob the crop of water and nutrients. But to sheep, these weeds are tasty and nutritious forage. This would make sheep (ovines) ideal for controlling vineyard weeds except for one thing — these herbivores like grape leaves just as much. Some managers get around this problem by using miniature “babydoll” sheep that are too short
to reach grape leaves. However, while effective,
these sheep are also expensive. Other managers
use sheep only when the grapevines are dormant,
but this means switching to other weed control
methods that have their own drawbacks during
the growing season. For example, mowing entails
increased fuel costs and soil compaction, and herbicides can contaminate surface waters (see "Post-emergence herbicides are cost effective for vineyard floor management on the Central Coast").
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One dose of
lithium chloride gives
sheep a mild stomach
ache and trains them
to avoid grapevines
and focus on the weeds
below.
Photo by Morgan P. Doran/UCCE Solano County |
To find a better alternative, UCCE researchers are training sheep not to eat grape shoots and
leaves. “We got the idea from a workshop on manipulating what animals eat,” says project leader
Morgan Doran, a Solano County livestock advisor.
The workshop was by Fred Provenza of the Utah
State University program BEHAVE, which stands
for Behavioral Education for Human, Animal, Vegetation and Ecosystem Management. This program focuses on how animals
decide what to eat, and includes finding ways to encourage herbivores to eat invasive weeds and discourage them from eating desirable plants.
To train sheep, Provenza recommended letting
them eat as many grape leaves as they wanted and
then giving them a small dose of lithium chloride, which is harmless but causes a mild stomach ache. He
also recommended training young sheep rather than
adults. “You need to mold them at an early age, before they’ve had much dietary experience,” Doran says.
First, the UCCE team did a pilot project on ewe
lambs at UC Davis. These lambs had been raised on alfalfa pellets, and a single dose of lithium chloride was enough to make the lambs steer clear of grape leaves. Next, the team moved on to a fi eld study of 40
range-raised lambs at the UC Hopland Research and
Extension Center. These lambs were used to eating a variety of plants, and getting them to avoid grape
leaves required an additional, slightly higher dose of lithium chloride (still well below toxic levels).
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Top, a vine grazed by trained sheep; bottom, the same vine grazed by untrained (control) sheep.
Photo by Morgan P. Doran/UCCE Solano County |
The sheep aversion training has been remarkably effective. Nine months after their lithium
chloride doses, the 40 Hopland sheep still ignored vigorous growth on grapevines right in front of
their faces, preferring to munch on the weeds
growing beneath the vines. “They were comparable to normal floor management,” Doran says.
However, the possibility remains that even
trained sheep will eventually balk at eating some
vineyard fl oor plants and try grape leaves again. “It depends on the grazing management,“ Doran
says. “ If they don’t have enough feed or enough
palatable feed, they will transition from floor vegetation to grape leaves.”
So far the researchers haven’t found any weeds
that the trained sheep don’t like. But there are cover
crops that sheep don’t enjoy. “Some clovers, such
as balansa, are bitter in the spring, which made the
sheep start nibbling on grape leaves,” Doran says.
He recommends subterranean clover and ryegrass
as good cover crops for trained sheep.
Besides benefi ting vineyard managers, using
sheep to control weeds could also help sheep producers. Weed-eating sheep would reduce forage costs and give producers the new market of renting
out their flocks’ services. “The lamb market oscillates up and down quite a bit, and this could give
sheep producers a more secure source of income,”
Doran says.
— Robin Meadows
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