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๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ฟ Country deep-dive ยท Sheep ยท Production systems ยท ~12 min read ยท 11 May 2026

The NZ pastoral sheep system, properly modelled.

New Zealand exports more sheep meat than any other country on earth โ€” half a billion lambs through Alliance, Silver Fern Farms and AFFCO every year. The system runs almost entirely on pasture, predominantly Romney and Coopworth maternal genetics, on hill country where land cost and pasture growth are the binding constraints. Number of Lambs Weaned per ewe joined drives everything else.

24M
Sheep on hand ยท NZ 2026

The world's #1 sheep-meat exporter by volume and value, with the highest sheep-to-cattle ratio of any developed economy. NZ exports ~95% of its lamb production. The bioeconomic shape of the system is unlike any other sheep economy โ€” wool is residual revenue (or a cost), meat is the entire business, and the maternal economics of the ewe drive the bull's selection index.

Why NLW is the load-bearing axis.

In nearly every other sheep system on earth, growth, carcass yield, or wool quality dominate the selection objective. In New Zealand the dominant trait is Number of Lambs Weaned per ewe joined โ€” NLW. The reason is structural: most NZ ewes wean two lambs and a fraction wean three. Moving the herd average from 1.45 to 1.65 lambs weaned per ewe is a 14% revenue uplift on a roughly fixed cost base. Nothing else in the trait list comes close to that on a per-ewe-year economic axis.

The closed-form bioeconomic derivation reflects this. The NLW component of the weight derivation is:

wNLW = (Plamb ร— carcassavg) โˆ’ (costmarginal lamb)
where Plamb is the average per-lamb sale price (NZ$/head net of slaughter levy, processor cost, transport), carcassavg is the average lamb carcass weight at sale (~18 kg cwt), and costmarginal lamb is the marginal pasture, lambing-supervision, vaccination and supplement cost of carrying one extra lamb from birth to sale (~NZ$22-30/lamb).

On a typical Romney hill-country operation, this resolves to roughly NZ$95-120 per additional lamb weaned. That number is the load-bearing input to every other trait weight; the platform's production-system modifier "nz_pastoral_sheep" automatically captures it.

What's different about New Zealand.

Trait terminology, side by side.

The NZ trait names are mostly English-based but the canonical mapping for cross-country reading:

Canonical (Genemap)NZ (B+L NZ Genetics / SIL)AU (Sheep Genetics)UK (Signet)
Number of lambs weanedNLW (BV)NLW (ASBV)LR (Litter size)
8-month weightWW (BV)WWT (ASBV)EW (8wk wgt) ยท later 21wk
Ewe maternal weightEW (BV)EWT (ASBV)MWT (Maternal wgt)
Mature ewe weightMW (BV)MWT (ASBV)MWT (Mature wgt)
Carcass eye muscleEMD (BV)EMD (ASBV)MD (Muscle depth)
Carcass fat depthFD (BV)FAT (ASBV)FD (Fat depth)
Worm egg count / resistanceWEC (BV)WEC (ASBV)FEC (Faecal egg count)
SurvivalSUR (BV)SUR (ASBV)(not natively evaluated)

Two structural points worth flagging. NZ and AU share most ASBV/BV trait codes (a legacy of Sheep Genetics covering trans-Tasman work), but the underlying reference populations and BLUP calibrations are different โ€” a Romney ASBV in AU is not the same as a Romney BV in NZ. Second, UK Signet uses a different trait nomenclature with no exact NLW equivalent; the translator handles the semantic gap.

What that looks like on a real-shape Romney operation.

The numbers below are from a real-shape Hawke's Bay hill-country operation โ€” 3,800 mixed-age Romney/Coopworth ewes, 1,150 ewe hoggets, ram team of 22 (mix of Romney maternal sires and Suffolk/Texel terminal sires), 1.62 lambs weaned per ewe joined, all lambs sold on Silver Fern Farms PrimeAdvance schedule.

BVIndustry-default weightProducer-fit weightWhy the shift
NLW (Number of Lambs Weaned)NZ$108/lambNZ$132/lambThis producer's PrimeAdvance contract pays above national average; each extra lamb is worth more.
WW (8-month weight)NZ$3.20/kgNZ$3.05/kgSlight softening โ€” the operation's lambs are already at target weight.
SUR (Lamb survival)NZ$58/% unitNZ$74/% unitHill-country lambing โ€” exposure deaths matter more than national average.
EMD (Eye muscle depth)NZ$1.85/mmNZ$1.85/mmIndustry default carries through โ€” PrimeAdvance pays the standard conformation premium.
FD (Fat depth)โˆ’NZ$2.40/mmโˆ’NZ$3.10/mmSteeper penalty โ€” this processor's grid penalises excess GR more sharply than national average.
MW (Mature ewe weight)โˆ’NZ$0.95/kgโˆ’NZ$1.42/kgHill country โ€” every kg of mature ewe weight is fed across rough grazing for 12 months.
WEC (Worm egg count)โˆ’NZ$0.18/unitโˆ’NZ$0.18/unitDrench-resistance issues haven't yet emerged on this operation; default carries through.

The pattern is what the closed-loop calibration loop is designed to find. The producer's specific contract economics, their hill-country cost structure, and their realised slaughter outcomes shift the trait weights away from the national average โ€” but in interpretable, defensible directions. The same Romney bull catalogue feeds through this re-weighting and produces a different top-10 list than it would on a national-average operation.

One trait does most of the work. The other six do real work too. Industry indexes either nail the first part and miss the second, or get the second right and dilute the first. The per-farm engine doesn't have to choose.

The terminal-sire overlay.

Most NZ commercial sheep operations run a split mob strategy: maternal ewes mated to a maternal ram team to produce replacements (Romney ร— Romney, Coopworth ร— Coopworth), and the remainder of the ewe flock joined to terminal sires (Suffolk, Texel, Poll Dorset, Hampshire) to produce slaughter progeny. The terminal-sire animals' offspring are sold; no daughters retained.

The platform exposes this as a distinct production-system modifier โ€” nz_terminal_sire โ€” that re-weights the bull's index to ignore maternal traits entirely. A Suffolk ram joined over Romney ewes has its NLW BV zeroed (he's never measured for it; his daughters aren't retained), and the carcass-trait weights amplified. The setup-flow asks the producer what proportion of their ewe flock goes maternal vs terminal, and the engine derives the right mix.

What's wired natively for NZ sheep.

Where the platform can go further for NZ producers.

References cited inline: Young, McEwan, Newman et al. (2015) Animal 9: 1731-1738 โ€” NZ sheep genetic parameters; Newman, Dodds, McEwan (2009) NZ Journal of Agricultural Research 52: 359-376 โ€” B+L NZ Genetics evaluation methodology; Pickering et al. (2015) Animal 9: 1431-1440 โ€” methane EBVs in NZ sheep. Full Genemap bibliography at research.html. NZ SIL native ingestor and BV semantic mapping in core/js/catalogue-parsers-sheep.js (registered in core/js/eval-system-translator.js); the nz_pastoral_sheep production-system modifier in core/js/production-system-modifier.js.

Acknowledgement: the engine's NZ BV semantics were built against publicly-available B+L NZ Genetics and SIL data and benefit from substantial published work by AgResearch (Invermay), Massey University, Lincoln University and University of Otago. The platform welcomes academic collaboration with NZ teams; reach the engineering team via for-researchers.html.