home    about    browse    search    latest    help 
Login | Create Account

Effect of daily environmental temperature on farrowing rate and total born in dam line sows

Bloemhof, S.; Mathur, P. K.; Knol, E. F. and van der Waaij, E. H. (2013) Effect of daily environmental temperature on farrowing rate and total born in dam line sows. Journal of Animal Science, 91, pp. 2667-2679.

[thumbnail of Bloemhof-etal-2013-JAnimSci-91-p2667-2679.pdf] PDF - English
Limited to [Depositor and staff only]

2MB

Document available online at: http://www.journalofanimalscience.org/content/91/6/2667


Summary in the original language of the document

Heat stress is known to adversely affect reproductive performance of sows. However, it is important to know on which days or periods during the reproduction cycle heat stress has the greatest effects for designing appropriate genetic or management strategies. Therefore, this study was conducted to identify days and periods that have greatest effects on farrowing rate and total born of sows using 5 different measures of heat stress. The data consisted of 22,750 records on 5,024 Dutch Yorkshire dam line sows from 16 farms in Spain and Portugal. Heat stress on a given day was measured in terms of maximum temperature, diurnal temperature range and heat load. The heat load was estimated using 3 definitions considering different upper critical temperatures. Identification of days during the reproduction cycle that had maximum effect was based on the Pearson correlation between the heat stress variable and the reproduction trait, estimated for each day during the reproduction cycle. Polynomial functions were fitted to describe the trends of these correlations and the days with greatest negative correlation were considered as days with maximum effect. Correlations were greatest for maximum temperature, followed by those for heat load and diurnal temperature range. Correlations for both farrowing rate and total born were stronger in gilts than in sows. This implies that heat stress has a stronger effect on reproductive performance of gilts than of sows. Heat stress during the third week (21-14 days) before first insemination had largest effect on farrowing rate. Heat stress during the period between 7 days before successful insemination until 12 days after that had largest effect on total born. Correlations between temperatures on consecutive days during these periods were extremely high (>0.9). Therefore, for farrowing rate the maximum temperature on 21 days before first insemination and for total born the maximum temperature at day of successful insemination can be used as predictive measures of heat stress in commercial sow farms. Additionally, differences between daughter groups of sires were identified in response to high temperatures. This might indicate possibilities for genetic selection on heat tolerance.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:sows, gilts, farrowing rate, total burn, heat stress, environmental temperature
Subjects: Animal husbandry > Health and welfare
Animal husbandry > Production systems > Pigs
Research affiliation: European Union > 7th Framework Programme > LowInputBreeds > SP 3: Pigs
Netherlands > Wageningen University & Research (WUR)
Netherlands > Other organizations Netherlands
DOI:doi: 10.2527/jas.2012-5902
Deposited By: Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau, FiBL
ID Code:22487
Deposited On:27 Mar 2013 07:27
Last Modified:17 Jun 2013 11:12
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

Repository Staff Only: item control page

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics