The metabolic rates of newborn pigs in relation to floor insulation and ambient temperature

Author:

Stephens D. B.

Abstract

SUMMARY1. The metabolic rates of 58 individual piglets kept either on a straw or on a concrete floor at ambient temperatures near to 10°, 20° or 30°C have been measured with ages ranging from newborn to 9 days, and body weight from 1·0 to 3·2 kg. The oxygen consumption was measured on each floor material at the chosen ambient temperature thus allowing paired comparisons for each animal.2. In comparison with the concrete floor, oxygen consumption on straw was reduced by 18% at 10°C, 27% at 20°C and by 12% at 30°C for pigs 2 to 9 days old. The regression coefficients of mean log (oxygen consumption) on log (body weight) were around 0·66 at 10° and 20°C. At 30°C the value was 0·99 ± 0·14. The regression coefficients were not significantly affected by the presence of a straw floor showing that its effect did not vary with body weight. Corresponding values foi piglets below 24 hours of age were 17% at 10°C, 27% at 20°C and 22% at 30°C ambient temperature.3. Moving a piglet on to a straw floor at 10°C had the same thermal effect as raising the ambient temperature to 18°C. Similar treatment at 30°C was equivalent to raising the ambient temperature to 32°C.4. Lowering ambient temperature to increase the temperature gradient between the homeothermic body of the piglet and the environment progressively increased heat loss in all cases. There was a concomitant decrease in the calculated conductance between core and environment which was more pronounced for the piglets lying on the concrete floor.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

Reference16 articles.

1. Oxygen consumption of piglets on concrete and straw floors at various ambient temperatures;Stephens;Anim. Prod.,1969

2. Summit metabolism in young lambs;Alexander;J. Physiol., Lond.,1962

3. Estimating Animal-Floor Contact Areas

4. Effective temperature as a measure of environmental conditions for pigs

5. Lamb survival: physiological considerations;Alexander;Proc. Austr. Soc. Anim. Prod.,1964

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