Once small always small? To what extent morphometric characteristics and postweaning starter regime affect pig lifetime growth performance

A. M. S. Huting*, P. Sakkas, I. Wellock, K. Almond, I. Kyriazakis

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

31 Citations (Scopus)
15 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background: The aim of this study was to determine the effect of piglet morphometric characteristics and starter regime on postnatal growth. Some piglets born light are able to grow faster than others, and identifying which piglets are more at risk to remain light and at which stages of growth is essential. A nutrient enriched starter regime may allow lightweight pigs to improve their post-weaning growth. A total 1487 newly born piglets from 137 litters originating from 8 consecutive farrowing batches were followed from birth (BiW) to weaning (WW, d28) and finishing (d99). At birth morphometric measurements were taken, including body mass index (BMI), ponderal index (PI) and BiW:cranial circumferences (BiW:CC). At weaning pigs were randomly allocated to one of two experimental regimes: either a nutrient enriched regime with a 20% higher essential amino acids (EAA): energy ratio (HIGH) or a standard regime (CTRL). Piglets were retrospectively allocated to 4 different weight classes (C) using percentiles at birth, weaning and finishing, with C1 representing the lightest and C4 the heaviest class. A series of novel statistical models were used to determine which factors were able to predict performance. 

Results: For BiW C1 piglets, BMI (P = 0.003) and BiW relative to birth litter (P = 0.026) were positively associated with pre-weaning performance, whereas BiW:CC (P= 0.011) and WW (P = 0.001) were positively associated with post-weaning growth. Post-weaning the best predictors of piglets weaned light (WW C1) were PI (P = 0.037), BiW:CC (P < 0.001) and WW (P < 0.001). Starter regime did not influence (P > 0.05) post-weaning performance. 

Conclusion: Our results show that not all light pigs are the same and that their performance is under the influence of body shape rather than BiW. Therefore, pig producers should discriminate between light pigs based on birth characteristics to improve the effectiveness of intervention strategies at the different stages of growth. Irrespective of weight class piglets did not benefit from the EAA enriched regime applied.

Original languageEnglish
Article number21
JournalPorcine Health Management
Volume4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Jul 2018
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s). 2018.

Keywords

  • Birth weight
  • Body mass index
  • Growth
  • Pigs
  • Ponderal index
  • Weaning weight

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Small Animals
  • Food Animals
  • Animal Science and Zoology
  • veterinary (miscalleneous)

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Once small always small? To what extent morphometric characteristics and postweaning starter regime affect pig lifetime growth performance'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this