Associations among individual gilt birth weight, litter birth weight phenotype, and the efficiency of replacement gilt production

Author:

Patterson Jennifer1,Bernardi Mari L2,Allerson Matt3,Hanson Aaron3,Holden Nick3,Bruner Laura4,Pinilla Juan C5,Foxcroft George1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural, Food & Nutritional Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada

2. Animal Science Department, Agronomy School, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

3. Holden Farms, Inc. Northfield, MN

4. Swine Vet Center, St. Peter, MN

5. Global Technical Services, PIC, Hendersonville, TN

Abstract

Abstract Selection for larger litter size has increased the number of low individual birth weight (BWi) pigs and produced sows with a repeatable low average litter birth weight phenotype (BWP). Using an average of 3.6 litters records per sow, BWP was established in 644 nucleus-multiplication sows producing replacement gilts in a large commercial operation and classified as low (L-BWP, <1.18 kg, n = 85), medium (M-BWP, ≥1.18 to ≤1.35 kg, n = 250), or high (H-BWP, >1.35 kg, n = 309) on the basis of a BWi of 1.18 kg below which there was a high risk of early mortality and the average BWi (1.35 kg) for the population. In subsequent litters, potential replacement gilts born to these sows (n = 7,341) received a unique identification tag that allowed the impact of BWi, BWP, and their interactions on the efficiency of replacement gilt production to be evaluated. Negative effects of BWi on mortality until day 4 after birth were confirmed (P < 0.05) and cumulative losses to weaning, to day 70 of age, and to final pre-selection at 165 d of age were affected (P ≤ 0.05) by the interaction between BWP and BWi. Among the 2,035 gilts for which records for selection efficiency and production to fourth parity were available, a lower BWi decreased the probability of gilts reaching pubertal estrus (P < 0.05) after 21 and 28 d of boar stimulation starting at 180 d of age, with no effect of BWP. Overall, neither BWi, BWP, nor their interaction affected age at puberty. After breeding, only the main effect of BWP affected productivity and retention in the sow herd. In parities 1 and 2, percent stillborn was higher in litters born to gilts from H-BWP compared with L-BWP dams (P < 0.05), and in parity 2, total born and born alive were lower in sows derived from H-BWP compared with other BWPs. There were no differences in retention based on BWP classes until parity 2, after which retention tended (P ≤ 0.09) to be lower in sows derived from H-BWP compared with L-BWP dams. These results provide evidence that sow BWP is an important factor in the overall efficiency of replacement gilt management. This study also confirms that effective gilt selection and pre-breeding management protocols support excellent sow lifetime productivity and mitigate the risk of a high BWP in the litter of origin affecting retention in the breeding herd.

Funder

National Pork Checkoff

Genus-PIC, Hendersonville

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science

Reference48 articles.

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2. Ovarian follicle development and genital tract characteristics in different birthweight gilts at 150 days of age;Almeida;Reprod. Domest. Anim,2017

3. Effects of birthweight on reproductive system development and onset of puberty in gilts;Almeida;Reprod. Fertil. Dev,2015

4. Growth rate and age at boar exposure as factors influencing gilt puberty;Amaral Filha;Livest. Sci,2009

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