Occupation intelligence

sheep breeder

Role lens

Do you enjoy working outdoors and have a passion for animal welfare? As a sheep breeder, you'll play a vital role in ensuring healthy flocks and contributing to sustainable agriculture.

Summary

Sheep breeders are responsible for the overall health, welfare, and breeding of sheep. This role involves a combination of practical animal care, monitoring flock health, and implementing breeding programs to improve the quality and productivity of the sheep. It’s a hands-on occupation requiring attention to detail and a commitment to ethical animal husbandry.

Key responsibilities
  • • Monitoring sheep health and administering necessary treatments, often working with a veterinarian.
  • • Managing breeding programs, selecting suitable animals for mating, and tracking lineage.
  • • Ensuring proper nutrition and providing adequate shelter for the flock.
82%
Resilience Score

Do you enjoy working outdoors and have a passion for animal welfare? As a sheep breeder, you'll play a vital role in ensuring healthy flocks and contributing to sustainable agriculture.

Agriculture Upper secondary education 20% AI exposure
Start Career DNA assessment
Quick fit check

Could sheep breeder fit you?

Answer three quick questions. This is not a full assessment — it is a teaser to help you decide whether to compare your profile.

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Do you enjoy tasks that require Dependability?

Do you enjoy tasks that require Integrity?

Do you enjoy tasks that require Attention to Detail?

NexFuture

Future Outlook for sheep breeder

The outlook for sheep breeder is exceptionally stable. While AI tools will assist with daily tasks, the core of this role relies on human judgment, resulting in a high resilience score of 81.7%.

How are these scores calculated?

The Resilience Score (0–100) estimates how structurally protected this occupation is from automation and AI disruption, based on task-level analysis. Higher scores mean more human-judgment-intensive tasks. AI Exposure shows the estimated percentage of task hours that current AI capabilities could affect. These are model-derived structural indicators, not predictions about individual job security.

Play the future

How could sheep breeder change as AI adoption grows?

Human judgement, trust, and context remain strong protectors for this role.

Significant task-level transformation is estimated in 19 years (around 2045) under the selected Expected Pace scenario.
81%
Resilience
Automation Risk
EXP24%
Human advantage
MOAT80%
2026
2036
2050
AI Adoption Speed:

How AI may change this role

Deterministic, model-based interpretation of current role signals — not a guarantee of replacement.

Human-owned 82% Human-owned
What still depends on people

This role remains strongly human-led where breed sheep depends on trust, nuance, and real-world judgement.

The Human Edge To stay ahead in this role, focus on livestock reproduction and livestock species. These human-centric skills are the hardest for AI to replicate in the next 20 years.
Assist 31% Assist
Where AI may become a co-pilot

AI is more likely to assist supporting tasks such as administer drugs to facilitate breeding, documentation, search, and workflow coordination.

Automate 20% Automate
Tasks most exposed to automation

Automation pressure appears selective rather than broad, with the strongest signal currently coming from Robotic automation.

Detailed Analysis

Vital Signs, AI Vectors & Megatrends

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Vital Signs

AI Exposure Vectors

0-100%
Robotic & Physical Automation 30.9%

Exposure to physical automation, robotics, and sensor-driven task displacement

Generative AI 21.3%

Exposure to content generation, creative augmentation, and large language model tools

Cognitive Software 16.9%

Exposure to workflow automation, decision-support software, and process digitisation

AI / Machine Learning 12.7%

Exposure to AI-assisted analysis, pattern recognition, and predictive modelling tasks

Megatrend Signals

0-100%
Green Transition 8%
Regulatory Pressure 3%
Geopolitical Change 2%
Digital Transformation 0%
Demographic Shift 0%
Spatial Change -38%

Model-derived scores. Indicates structural exposure to megatrends, not direct demand.

Technical Details
Methodology: NexFuture v2.0 Sources: O*NET 30.0, ESCO v1.2.0 Updated: May 2026

NexFuture™ v2.0 combines O*NET ability and activity profiles with ESCO skill group distributions and six global megatrend signals. Scores are probabilistic estimates, not guarantees. See the NexFuture™ Methodology White Paper for full details.

Day in the life

What people in this role usually do

Agriculture

Day in the life

A typical day as a sheep breeder

09
09:00 · Morning
breed sheep
Prepare a suitable environment for sheep breeding. Select and prepare the appropriate habitats for specific kinds of sheep. Monitor the sheep's growth and health and ensure correct feeding. Determinate when the sheep are ready for trade, consuption or other purposes.
10
10:30 · Mid-morning
apply animal hygiene practices
Plan and use appropriate hygiene measures to prevent transmission of diseases and ensure an effective overall hygiene. Maintain and follow hygiene procedures and regulations when working with animals, communicate site hygiene controls and protocols to others. Manage the safe disposal of waste according to destination and local regulations.
12
12:00 · Midday
administer treatment to animals
Administer animal medical interventions, including the treatments performed, medicines used, and assessments of the state of health.'
14
14:00 · Afternoon
assist in transportation of animals
Assist with the transportation of animals, including the loading and unloading of animals, the preparation of the transport vehicle, and maintaining the wellbeing of the animal throughout the transport process.
15
15:30 · Late afternoon
administer drugs to facilitate breeding
Administer specific drugs for synchronisation of breeding cycles to animals in accordance with veterinary and owner instructions. This includes the safe use and storage of drugs and equipment and record keeping.
17
17:00 · Wrap-up
assist animal birth
Assist in animal births, and care for newborn livestock. Make sure the animal has a clean and quiet place where it can give birth. Have clean drying towels handy at hand and a bottle filled with iodine.

Task order is illustrative. Individual days vary.

Software & Technologies & Knowledge areas
Software & Technologies
Adobe AcrobatAdobe Creative Cloud softwareAdobe IllustratorAdobe InDesignAdobe PhotoshopBreedtrakEmail softwareKinTraksMicrosoft AccessMicrosoft ExcelMicrosoft Internet ExplorerMicrosoft Office softwareMicrosoft OutlookMicrosoft SharePointMicrosoft WindowsMicrosoft WordQuestionmark PerceptionRespondusReudink Software ZooEasyVSN International GenStat
Knowledge areas
  • livestock reproduction

    The natural and artificial reproduction techniques, gestation periods and birthing for livestock.

  • livestock species

    Livestock species and relevant genetics.

  • signs of animal illness

    Physical, behavioural and environmental signs of health and ill health in various animals.

  • computerised feeding systems

    The functioning of computered controlled systems that provide animal feeding.

Cross-sector skills
  • animal nutrition
  • animal welfare legislation
  • health and safety regulations
Essential skills
tending and breeding animals
  • provide first aid to animals

    Administer emergency treatment to prevent deterioration of the condition, suffering and pain until veterinary assistance can be sought. Basic emergency treatment needs to be done by non-veterinarians prior to first-aid provided by a veterinarian. Non-veterinarians providing emergency treatment are expected to seek treatment by a veterinarian as soon as possible.

  • monitor livestock

    Monitor and record the production and the welfare of the livestock.

  • manage the health and welfare of livestock

    Assess the current health status of your livestock. Manage any existing disease or disorder, including the requirements for isolation of livestock. Plan and manage a livestock health and welfare plan including clearly defined targets, consulting with specialists/advisers where appropriate. Work closely with the veterinary surgeon and other specialist consultants/advisers.

  • apply animal hygiene practices

    Plan and use appropriate hygiene measures to prevent transmission of diseases and ensure an effective overall hygiene. Maintain and follow hygiene procedures and regulations when working with animals, communicate site hygiene controls and protocols to others. Manage the safe disposal of waste according to destination and local regulations.

  • care for juvenile animals

    Assess the needs of the offspring and juvenile animals. Take appropriate action without delay in case of problems with the health of the offspring or juvenile.

  • manage livestock

    Plan production programmes, birth plans, sales, feed purchase orders, materials, equipment, housing, location and stock management. Plan the destruction of relevant animals in humane manner and in accordance with national legislation. Follow businesses requirements and integration into qualitative research and knowledge transfer.

moving and herding animals
  • control animal movement

    Direct, control or restrain some or part of an animal's, or a group of animals', movement.

  • assist in transportation of animals

    Assist with the transportation of animals, including the loading and unloading of animals, the preparation of the transport vehicle, and maintaining the wellbeing of the animal throughout the transport process.

monitoring health conditions of humans and animals
  • manage animal biosecurity

    Plan and use appropriate biosafety measures to prevent transmission of diseases and ensure effective overall biosecurity. Maintain and follow biosecurity procedures and infection control when working with animals, including recognising potential health issues and taking appropriate action, communicating site hygiene control measures and biosecurity procedures, as well as reporting to others.

  • monitor the welfare of animals

    Monitor animals’ physical condition and behaviour and report any concerns or unexpected changes, including signs of health or ill-health, appearance, condition of the animals' accommodation, intake of food and water and environmental conditions.

feeding and grooming animals
  • provide nutrition to animals

    Provide food and water to animals. This includes preparing food and water for animals and reporting any changes in the animal feeding or drinking habits.'

  • feed livestock

    Calculate feed rations for all stages of growth and prepare, distribute and control quality of fodder

maintaining operational records
  • maintain professional records

    Produce and maintain records of work performed.

  • create animal records

    Create animal records according to industry relevant information and using appropriate record keeping systems.

providing therapy or veterinary treatment for animals
  • administer drugs to facilitate breeding

    Administer specific drugs for synchronisation of breeding cycles to animals in accordance with veterinary and owner instructions. This includes the safe use and storage of drugs and equipment and record keeping.

  • administer treatment to animals

    Administer animal medical interventions, including the treatments performed, medicines used, and assessments of the state of health.'

cleaning interior and exterior of buildings
  • maintain animal accommodation hygienic

    Make sure animal enclosures such as habitats, terrariums, cages or kennels are in the appropriate and hygienic condition. Clean the enclosure and provide new bedding material if called for.

operating food processing machinery
  • process dairy farm products

    Carry out on-farm processing of diary products using appropriate methods and equipment, following food hygiene regulations.

Skill DNA

Skill DNA

Work personality traits and values that define this role

Key traits you need
Dependability Integrity Attention to Detail Independence Self-Control Cooperation Initiative Concern for Others Adaptability/Flexibility Persistence Stress Tolerance Leadership Achievement/Effort Innovation Analytical Thinking Social Orientation
Key rewards you can expect
AchievementWorking Condit…RecognitionRelationshipsSupportIndependence
Career progression

Growth Pathways & Similar Roles

Explore typical career progression paths, adjacent skills, and similar roles to plan your next transition.

Career landscape

Where does sheep breeder fit?

This role
sheep breeder This role

Similarity scores based on skill overlap from ESCO data.

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Common questions

Frequently asked questions

What kind of training or experience is typically needed to become a sheep breeder?
While formal qualifications aren't always required, a strong understanding of animal husbandry is essential. Many sheep breeders gain experience through apprenticeships, working on farms, or completing relevant agricultural courses. Practical experience handling sheep is highly valued.
Are sheep breeders typically self-employed or employed by a farm?
This occupation is typically conducted in an employment arrangement. You'll most likely find work as an employee on a sheep farm or agricultural enterprise.
What are some of the challenges faced by sheep breeders?
Challenges can include managing disease outbreaks, dealing with unpredictable weather conditions, and adapting to changing market demands for wool and meat. Maintaining flock welfare in the face of these challenges is a key responsibility.