Assessment of sows mating efficacy during the low productive period after early weaning: a field study
1999
Koketsu, Y.
Data on sows bred after weaning (n = 9,540) and their lactation feed intake records (average lactation length < 20 d) were obtained from 16 commercial farms. Weaning-to-first-mating intervals (WMI) at 6 to 12 d and 0 to 6 d after weaning were defined as the low and high productive periods, respectively. Of the 9,192 sows mated, 80.5 and 19.5% were mated at 0 to 6 d and 7 to 12 d, respectively. In logistic regression analysis, lower parity, shorter lactation length, lower average daily feed intake (ADFI) during lactation, and a greater number of weaned pigs were associated with mating at 7 to 12 d after weaning (P less than or equal to 0.045). Exponentiating the coefficients in logistic regression analysis, the odds ratios were 0.79 for parity, 0.84 for ADFI during lactation, 0.85 for lactation length, and 1.05 for weaned pigs, respectively. A sow with a 14-d lactation length is 2.3 (1/0.85(5)) times as likely to mate within a 6- to 12-d WMI as a sow with a 19-d lactation length. Thus, the early weaned sows are more likely to mate during the low productive period than the later weaned sows. The odds for parity 0.79 imply that Parity 1 sows were 1.6 (1/0.79(2)) times as likely to mate within a WMI 6 to 12 d as Parity 3 sows. For each 1-kg increase in ADFI, a mating occurrence during the low productive period decreased by 0.84 times. Sows are mated during the low productive period because this period is a part of the distribution of WMI in a herd. However, our research suggests that increasing feed intake during lactation and maintaining parity proportion appropriate to the herd can decrease the proportion of sows mated during the low productivity period.
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