Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2454560 | The Professional Animal Scientist | 2006 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
An experiment was conducted to determine the effects of heavyweight pig removal and remixing on performance. The experiment used a total of 450 pigs (31Â kg initial BW) that were sorted and remixed at a mean replicate BW of 73Â kg. Treatments were 15 pigs/pen from initial BW to slaughter (15S), 20 pigs/pen from initial BW to time of sort and remix, then reduced to 15 pigs/pen (20/ 15), and 15 pigs/pen from time of sort and remix to slaughter, comprised of the 5 heaviest pigs from each of three 20/15 pens per replicate (15M). Space allocation was 0.56Â m2/pig to the day of remixing and 0.74Â m2/pig thereafter. There was no effect (P > 0.1) of treatment on ADG before 73Â kg BW when pens were the experimental units. There was no effect (P > 0.1) of treatment on ADG or feed conversion to slaughter BW following removal and remixing using the contrast 20/15 + 15M vs. 15S. The average of the replicate for 20/15 and 15M was used as the experimental unit in a second statistical analysis. Daily feed was less (P = 0.079) from placement to 73Â kg BW for the 20/15 + 15M population vs. the 15S population resulting in a lesser (P = 0.067) overall ADG (0.875 vs. 0.887 kg/d, respectively) with no effect (P > 0.1) on feed conversion or CV sample population BW. Removal and remixing of heavyweight pigs at a midpoint in the growth process had minimal effects on performance to slaughter and CV for BW at slaughter.
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Authors
M.C. PAS, NCR-89 Committee On Swine Management NCR-89 Committee On Swine Management, L.J. Johnston, D.W. Rozeboom,