breed standards—barbados blackbelly

The attributes listed below describe the Barbados
Blackbelly breed and should be used to evaluate sheep considered
for registration with the Barbados Blackbelly Sheep Association
International (BBSAI). Although this standard describes the
phenotypic attributes of the breed, there are other attributes
that are not easily defined but that are most valued about
the Barbados Blackbelly breed. Attributes such as prolificacy,
disease resistance, parasite tolerance, non-seasonal breeding,
and mothering ability contribute to the integrity of the breed. The BBSAI encourages breeders
to include these non-phenotypic attributes when evaluating
and selecting stock to include in their breeding programs.
The BBSAI does not guarantee the quality of
a registered sheep. The purpose of the BBSAI registry is to
enable breeders to track the pedigrees of their animals. It
is the breeder’s responsibility to ensure that only
sheep meeting these breed standards are submitted for registration.
It is also the breeder’s responsibility to cull any
sheep that are Not to Standard and to prevent their genetics
from contaminating the general population of Barbados Blackbelly
sheep.
These are the tiers used to describe each attribute:
- Ideal : The perfect
sheep. This is the sheep we all want, the sheep we all strive
to breed.
- Acceptable :
These flaws are generally cosmetic and rarely are genetically
fixed across generations. If the flaw does persist across
generations, the breeder should work to eliminate it.
- Discouraged :
These are serious flaws. The breeder should recognize that
these flaws, if allowed to pervade the flock, will compromise
the flock’s integrity. Elimination of these flaws
should be a priority.
- Not to Standard
: Sheep with these flaws should be culled from a breeding
program. These flaws are detrimental to the future of the
breed.
|
| HEAD |
Ideal :
- The shape of the head is oval to triangular
with a typical “roman” nose.
- The head of the ram is distinctly masculine,
and that of the ewe is feminine.
- The muzzle is wide and strong with firm
lips. Incisor teeth must meet the dental pad.
Acceptable : A ewe's
head may exhibit some less feminine coarseness, but it must
still be decidedly distinct from the ram's head.
Discouraged : Muzzle more narrow than
ideal Not to Standard
: Overshot or undershot jaw
|
 |
| EARS |
Ideal :
- The ears are pointed and when alert
stick out from the side of the head parallel to the ground.
- The ear length should be approximately
one-half the width of the animal's skull at the widest point
of the skull.
- Some variation in the size of the ears
is permitted.
Acceptable : Ears pointing
forward, ears not parallel to the ground
Discouraged : Floppy
adult ears, half ears or less ( “
elf ” ears) |
 |
| EYES |
Ideal :
- The eyes are almond shaped.
- The irises of the eyes can be any shade
of brown or golden brown.
Discouraged : Eyes of
a color other than brown or golden brown
Not to Standard : Inverted
eyelids, blindness |
 |
| POLL |
Ideal : Sheep of both sexes are smooth-headed
with no sign of any outgrowth of the horn plate.
Acceptable : Loose scurs
or scurs affixed to a ram's horn plate no longer than 3/4
in. at maturity
Discouraged : Loose
scurs or scurs affixed to a ram's horn plate between 3/4 in.
to 1 1/2 in. at maturity
Not to Standard : Ewes
with horns or scurs; rams with horns or with scurs longer
than 1 1/2 in. |
 |
| NECK |
Ideal : The neck is strong and muscular,
clean cut, and without loose folds of skin.
Acceptable : Occasionally,
wattles are found, but are not discriminated against.
Discouraged : A thin,
scrawny neck |
 |
| FOREQUARTERS |
Ideal :
- The arm and the shoulder blade are well
muscled.
- The forelegs appear straight when viewed
from the front and side.
- A slight tendency toward splay-footedness
(toes that point outward) is not uncommon.
- The pasterns are strong and springy.
Discouraged :
- Weak, bony shoulder blades that protrude
from the body.
- Any deviations from straight legs as
long as they are minor, including such things as weak pasterns,
feet that are pigeon-toed, and knees that are knock-kneed,
calf-kneed, or buck-kneed.
Not to Standard : Marked
deviations from ideal, including but not limited to deviations
that interfere with the sheep's ability to walk normally.
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Correct |
Splay-Footed |
Pigeon Toed |
Knock-Kneed |
Correct |
Calf-Kneed |
Weak Pasterns |
Buck-Kneed |
|
|
| HINDQUARTERS |
Ideal :
- The hindquarters should be muscular with a long, gradually sloping croup (rump).
- The hind legs viewed from behind should be straight.
- From the side view, a vertical line dropped from the posterior of the buttocks should hit the
point of the hock and the back of the ankle and contact the ground 1 in. to 2 in. behind the heel.
- A slight tendency toward cow-hockedness
is not uncommon (when viewed from behind, the 'back knee'
or hock is set inward, resulting in a splayed look in the
back legs).
Discouraged : Bowed
legs; sickle-hocked legs; and post-leggedness.
Not to Standard : Marked
deviations from ideal, including but not limited to deviations
that interfere with the sheep's ability to walk normally.
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Correct |
Bowlegged |
Cow-Hocked |
Correct |
Sickle-Hocked |
Post-Legged |
|
|
| FEET |
Ideal : The hooves are cloven, black,
and clean-edged with shiny smooth surfaces.
Discouraged : White
hooves or hooves with white marks on them;
Not to Standard : Marked
deviations from ideal, including but not limited to deviations
that interfere with the sheep's ability to walk normally. |
|
| BODY |
Ideal :
- Body capacity should be relatively large
in relation to the size of the animal.
- The body should be deep and wide with
well-sprung ribs.
- A mature ram's testicles should be well
developed.
Not to Standard : Cryptorchidism
(a condition in which one or both testes fail to descend normally)
in a ram |
|
| TOPLINE |
Ideal :
- The withers are higher than and sloping
into a level back.
- The loin viewed from the top should
be broad and strong.
- The croup (rump) should be long and
gradually sloping.
Discouraged : Saddle
back or sway back; short, steep croup |
|
| TAIL |
Ideal :
- The tail is long, and reaches to the
top of the hocks.
- It is not docked.
- It follows a continuous line down from
the croup without any crookedness.
Acceptable : A short
tip of white on the tail is permissible
Discouraged : Short
tails, crooked tails |
 |
| COAT |
Ideal :
- The coat consists of coarse hair that
lies flat against the skin.
- An adult ram has a mane of coarse hair
that covers the neck and downward to the chest.
- The hair coat contains sufficient lanolin
to help shed water and repel ticks and other ectoparasites.
- If the sheep grows a winter undercoat
of fine wool, that undercoat is completely shed every year.
Acceptable :
- A woolly “baby coat” often
seen in lambs that does not shed the first summer but does
shed thereafter
- A hair/wool mixture on the back of the
rear legs that does not fully shed from year to year
Discouraged : Small
patches of wool along the topline that do not shed from year
to year.
Not to Standard : A
woolly coat that is not shed and that requires shearing |
 |
| COLOR
AND MARKING |
Ideal :
- Body color can vary from light fawn
through brown to dark red.
- Points can vary but should include a
contrasting black belly extending down the back side of
the rear legs and including the underside of the tail.
- The top of the nose and the lower jaw
are black and may include a continuing black stripe down
the front of the neck that connects with the belly.
- A wide black mark runs from the inside
corner of each eye to the crown of the head and may continue
downward to the mouth. These markings are called facial
bars. They are sometimes more pronounced in the ram.
- There may be an additional black mark
from the outside corner of the eye to the corner of the
mouth.
- There is a crown of black hair at the
top of the head.
- The inside of the ears is black.
- The forelegs and hind legs are black
downward from the knee or hock; often the outside edge of
the leg is not black.
- A ram may have a light tan "saddle"
above and including the ribs
Discouraged:
- Black or white markings found anywhere
on the body other than those listed
- A dark facial color that obscures the
black facial bars
- A coat color that is so extremely dark
that a clear delineation cannot be seen between the dark
body color and the black belly color
Not to Standard : Absence
of a black belly or black facial bars |

 |
| SIZE |
Ideal : Barbados Blackbelly is a slow maturing breed,
and sheep do not reach ideal weight until about 2 years of
age. At that time,
- rams weigh between 90 to 150 lb, with
100 to 130 lb being the average.
- ewes weigh between 70 and 120 lb, with
85 to 100 lb being the average.
Acceptable : Sheep older
than 2 years who weigh more than the maximum ideal weight,
providing that their weight is proportionate to the size of
their body frame and they are not obese
Discouraged : Sheep
older than 2 years who weigh less than the minimum ideal weight |
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