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Length of productive life of crossbred sows is affected by farm management, leg conformation, sow's own prolificacy, sow's origin parity and genetics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2007

T. Serenius*
Affiliation:
Iowa State University, Department of Animal Science, Ames, IA 50011, USA
K. J. Stalder
Affiliation:
Iowa State University, Department of Animal Science, Ames, IA 50011, USA

Abstract

The purpose of the current study was to determine if the parity of the litter in which a female was born and the number of pigs within that same litter are associated with future length of productive life (LPL). An additional objective of the study was to examine the associations of leg conformation (evaluated at approx. 100 kg of live weight), age at first farrowing, litter size at first farrowing, and age and backfat thickness at 100 kg on LPL in the Finnish crossbred (Landrace × Large White or Large White × Landrace) population. The data analysed contained information on 11 761 sows, and proportional hazard model (Weibull) was fitted on the data using the Survival Kit. Log likelihood tests were utilised to determine if the individual effects have a significant impact on LPL. Farm conditions and management were identified as major factors impacting on LPL ( P < 0.001). Other factors significantly ( P < 0.001) associated with LPL were leg soundness score, age at first farrowing, and litter size at first farrowing. The better the leg score, the younger age at first farrowing, and the larger litter at first farrowing, the longer sows tended to remain in the herd from the present. Although sows born in litters first, second, and sixth parities had slightly greater risk of being culled when compared with sows born in litters from the other parities, the effect was not statistically significant. Sufficient genetic variation exists in the population evaluated in this study for LPL (h2 = 0.25), such that it will be possible to improve LPL through traditional selection methods in an efficient breeding programme. Thus, there are many factors which impact on LPL, and possibilities to improve all of them should be considered in order to improve the economics and animal welfare of modern pork production operations.

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Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Animal Consortium 2007
Figure 0

Table 1 Means, standard deviations (s.d.), minima (Min) and maxima (Max) of parity of the litter in which a sow was born, size of the litter in which a sow was born (LSorig), number of piglets born alive at first farrowing (NBA), age at first farrowing (AFF), backfat thickness at 100 kg live weight (BF100, mm), age at 100 kg live weight (Age100), leg soundness score (Leg score), and length of productive life (LPL) in the Finnish crossbred sow population

Figure 1

Figure 1 Graphical test for validity of Weibull distribution on current dataset: Survivor function (log( − log S(t))) plotted against natural logarithm of time (days) from first farrowing (log(t)). A straight line indicates Weibull fitting well on the data.

Figure 2

Table 2 P values and reliabilities (R2) from log likelihood ratio test when the covariates were tested by excluding one at a time (last) from the full model†

Figure 3

Figure 2 Estimated survivor functions (S(t)) for different leg soundness scores. Scoring is from 1 (worst) to 5 (best). Length of productive life is determined as a time from first farrowing to culling or censoring.

Figure 4

Figure 3 Estimated regression effects of age at first farrowing (AFF), age at 100 kg live weight (age100), and backfat thickness at 100 kg live weight (an average of three ultrasound measures at approx. last rib; BF100) on sows' relative risk of being culled at any given time point. Covariates have been scaled to population mean and s.d. (see Table 1) in order to compare their relative importance.

Figure 5

Figure 4 Estimated effects of the parity of the litter in which a female was born and the number of pigs within that same litter (number born alive, NBA) at first farrowing on relative risk of sow being culled at any given time point (from first farrowing to culling). The risk of culling is scaled relatively to class 1 of origin parity and class 11 of NBA.