4.7 Review

Gilt development to improve offspring performance and survivability

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
Volume 100, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jas/skac128

Keywords

birth weight; colostrum; lifetime performance; longevity; nutrition; pig

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Proper gilt development is essential for improving offspring performance and survivability through increasing gilt longevity and colostrum/milk production. It involves selecting gilts with a birth weight above 1 kg, prioritizing colostrum/milk intake, and weaning at the appropriate age. Attention should be given to nutrition, feeding management, and proper body condition during the grower phase and gestation. Correct boar exposure, reaching the target weight at breeding, and maintaining body reserves without over-conditioning at farrowing are also important. The proper development of gilts directly impacts the livability of their offspring by increasing colostrum/milk production, while the increased longevity indirectly improves livability by enhancing the growth and survival rate of offspring from older sows.
Methods for developing incoming replacement gilts can indirectly and directly influence survivability of their offspring. Indirectly, having proper gilt development reduces culling rates and mortality, which increases longevity and creates a more mature sow herd. Older sows are more likely to have greater immunity than gilts and therefore can pass this along to their pigs in both quantity and quality of colostrum and milk, thus improving piglet survivability. Directly, proper gilt development will maximize mammary gland development which increases colostrum and milk production leading to large, healthy pig. As for the developing gilt at birth, increasing colostrum intake, reducing nursing pressure, providing adequate space allowance, and good growth rate can increase the likelihood that gilts successfully enter and remain in the herd. Light birth weight gilts (<1 kg) or gilts from litters with low birth weight should be removed early in the selection process. Gilts should be weaned at 24 d of age or older and then can be grown in a variety of ways as long as lifetime growth rate is over 600 g/d. Current genetic lines with exceptional growth rate run the risk of being bred too heavy, reducing longevity. On the other hand, restricting feed intake at specific times could be detrimental to mammary development. In these situations, reducing diet amino acid concentration and allowing ad libitum feed is a possible strategy. Gilts should be bred between 135 and 160 kg and at second estrus or later while in a positive metabolic state to increase lifetime productivity and longevity in the herd. Once bred, gilts should be fed to maintain or build body reserves without becoming over-conditioned at farrowing. Proper body condition at farrowing impacts the percentage of pigs born alive as well as colostrum and milk production, and consequently, offspring performance and survivability. Combined with the benefit in pig immunity conferred by an older sow parity structure, gilt development has lasting impacts on offspring performance and survivability. Key nutrition and management strategies for replacement gilt improve longevity in the sow herd which helps in stabilizing herd health and benefits reproductive performance. Practices aiming to maximize colostrum and milk production are essentials to ensure good gilt progeny performance and survivability. Lay Summary Proper gilt development influences offspring performance and survivability by increasing gilt longevity and colostrum and milk production. Gilt development success starts in selecting gilts heavier than 1 kg at birth, prioritizing colostrum and milk intake, and weaning at 24 d of age or older. During the grower phase, attention must rely on nutrition and feeding management to avoid fat gilts at farrowing, promote adequate mammary development, and have structural soundness. Appropriate boar exposure and reaching target weight (135 to 160 kg) at breeding in the second or third estrous can dictate reproductive performance and longevity. During gestation, the whole focus is on body condition. Fat gestating gilts may struggle with leg and feet issues and compromise the litter due to lower colostrum and milk production. Properly developed gilts directly impact livability of their offspring through increased colostrum and milk production. Increased longevity indirectly improves livability because offspring of older sows have improved growth and survival rate compared to offspring of first litter sows.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available