A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Many factors influence litter size. These include genetics, gilt management, lactation length, parity distribution, disease, stress and boar fertility. In the past 20 years, litter size in Irish sows has increased by only one pig. Born alive figures now average a...

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Main Authors: Lawlor Peadar G, Lynch P Brendan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-06-01
Series:Irish Veterinary Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/6/359
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author Lawlor Peadar G
Lynch P Brendan
author_facet Lawlor Peadar G
Lynch P Brendan
author_sort Lawlor Peadar G
collection DOAJ
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Many factors influence litter size. These include genetics, gilt management, lactation length, parity distribution, disease, stress and boar fertility. In the past 20 years, litter size in Irish sows has increased by only one pig. Born alive figures now average at 11.2 pigs per litter. In this regard, Ireland is falling behind our European competitors who have made significant advances over this time. Denmark, for example, has an average figure of 12.7 pigs born alive per litter and France an average of 12.5. The single area that could be improved immediately is sow feeding. It is important that sows are fed correctly throughout pregnancy. If over-fed during pregnancy, sows will have depressed appetite during lactation. If underfed in pregnancy, sows will be too thin at farrowing. The correct way to feed a pregnant sow is to match her feed allocation to her requirement for maintenance, body growth and growth of her developing foetuses. During lactation, sows should be given as much feed as they can eat to prevent excessive loss of body condition. Liquid-feed curves should be such that lactating sows are provided with a minimum mean daily feed supply of 6.2 kg. A small proportion of sows will eat more and this could be given as supplementary dry feed. Where dry feeding is practised in the farrowing house, it is difficult to hand-feed sows to match their appetite. Ideally <it>ad libitum </it>wet/dry feeders should be used. From weaning to service, sows should once again be fed <it>ad libitum</it>. If liquid feeding, this means giving at least 60 MJ DE (digestible energy) per day during this period. If dry feeding, at least 4 kg of lactation diet should be fed daily. The effort spent perfecting sow feeding management on units should yield high dividends in the form of increased pigs born alive per litter.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-3b5e7bb701604ac6acdf943f4a4e038e2022-12-21T20:28:58ZengBMCIrish Veterinary Journal2046-04812007-06-0160635936610.1186/2046-0481-60-6-359A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sowsLawlor Peadar GLynch P Brendan<p>Abstract</p> <p>Many factors influence litter size. These include genetics, gilt management, lactation length, parity distribution, disease, stress and boar fertility. In the past 20 years, litter size in Irish sows has increased by only one pig. Born alive figures now average at 11.2 pigs per litter. In this regard, Ireland is falling behind our European competitors who have made significant advances over this time. Denmark, for example, has an average figure of 12.7 pigs born alive per litter and France an average of 12.5. The single area that could be improved immediately is sow feeding. It is important that sows are fed correctly throughout pregnancy. If over-fed during pregnancy, sows will have depressed appetite during lactation. If underfed in pregnancy, sows will be too thin at farrowing. The correct way to feed a pregnant sow is to match her feed allocation to her requirement for maintenance, body growth and growth of her developing foetuses. During lactation, sows should be given as much feed as they can eat to prevent excessive loss of body condition. Liquid-feed curves should be such that lactating sows are provided with a minimum mean daily feed supply of 6.2 kg. A small proportion of sows will eat more and this could be given as supplementary dry feed. Where dry feeding is practised in the farrowing house, it is difficult to hand-feed sows to match their appetite. Ideally <it>ad libitum </it>wet/dry feeders should be used. From weaning to service, sows should once again be fed <it>ad libitum</it>. If liquid feeding, this means giving at least 60 MJ DE (digestible energy) per day during this period. If dry feeding, at least 4 kg of lactation diet should be fed daily. The effort spent perfecting sow feeding management on units should yield high dividends in the form of increased pigs born alive per litter.</p>http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/6/359littersizeIrelandsows
spellingShingle Lawlor Peadar G
Lynch P Brendan
A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
Irish Veterinary Journal
litter
size
Ireland
sows
title A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
title_full A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
title_fullStr A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
title_full_unstemmed A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
title_short A review of factors influencing litter size in Irish sows
title_sort review of factors influencing litter size in irish sows
topic litter
size
Ireland
sows
url http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/6/359
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