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News: 150 days from birth is the average time you need to sell your pigs for slaughter and it is about 85 kgs on average.
 
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Author Topic: Selecting for Improved Weaning Capacity (Hypor):  (Read 738 times)
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mikey
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« on: August 15, 2008, 10:05:08 AM »

Selecting for Improved Weaning Capacity
Selection Program

A lot of strides have been made in the improvement of pigs in the past few decades.  The advent of the use of BLUP in the early 90’s in particular gave a boost to the slow progress seen in those traits with low heritability, particularly reproductive traits. BLUP gave breeders increased accuracy in the estimation of genetic values, and therefore higher reliability of selection decisions. Hence, as will be observed in many breeding programs litter size, a trait that was previously very slow to improve, started going up relatively quickly.  Some breeding programs reported annual rates of improvement of as high as 0.3 pigs per sow per year in total piglets born.  But with this improvement comes an important question; are there any drawbacks?

Indeed, if the breeding program is not well balanced there can be downsides to this improvement and these have been very well documented. One can cite such problems as reduced birth weight, an increase in the number of unviable piglets, an increase in number of still births, increased piglet mortality, an increase in number of runty pigs in nursery/grower, reduced carcass quality of runty pigs, shorter sow productive life, overall sow weakness, etc. These problems arise when the program fails to take into account the relationships between the different traits that are critical to having a balanced approach.  When a breeding program is too heavily weighted towards prolificacy, some of the problems cited occur because litter size is negatively correlated to birth weight and consequently piglet viability. Some of the research done by people like Dr. George Foxcroft has shown that as litter size goes up average birth weight of the piglets regresses.

Another trait that easily gets ignored as programs over-focus on prolificacy is the physical aspects of the selection candidates.  Ignoring this aspect will eventually result in a line that lacks physical strength and hence sows that have very poor longevity.  A prolific sow that lasts only one parity cannot recoup the investment of its purchase price.

In a survey done in Germany a couple years back pig farmers were asked to rate different genetics available in the German market for various aspects.  It was interesting to note that some of the programs that have been known to have decent sows in terms of prolificacy were found lacking in sow physical strength and longevity.  Hypor sows were rated as among the best when it came to these two attributes.

In Hypor we understood this and quite some time back adopted the philosophy of breeding for balance.  We sought to improve not only total number of piglets born but also to address other traits that in combination create a balance in both the sow and her piglets.  The tenets are a prolific sow with good milk production, enough teats to support a big litter and good physical attributes to guarantee longevity. It is also a sow that breeds easily and is robust enough to withstand the rigours of reproduction and production stress in all production environments.  This sow in turn produces piglets that are what can be referred to as “value pigs”.  They are born in decent size litters yet with good enough birth weight to guarantee high survival rates. The sow’s high milk production and good mothering ability on these piglets that are already kick-started with good birth weight leads in turn to high weaning weights for big litters.  The final product is a sow that consistently produces large litters of heavy piglets and that maximizes the potential of her progeny in the nursery and finishing phases resulting in faster growth, more efficient feed conversion, heavier market hogs and improved carcass quality.



Selecting for balance (Weaning Capacity) requires the development of an index that covers the salient attributes and traits. An example of such an index is shown in Figure 1.

In endeavouring to achieve a sow with optimum longevity we understood that there are various factors that contribute to the removal/culling of sows from a herd; 1) reproductive failure – no heat, failure to conceive, 2) poor performance – small litters, poor milking, 3) feet and leg problems leading to welfare and management problems. These three main reasons can be referred to as voluntary culling.  Involuntary culling may be caused by various factors including injury, accidental death, and so on.  By genetically improving the traits that lead to culling we indirectly select for improved longevity, which is one of the key components of “Weaning Capacity”.  On top of the selection for reproductive performance, Hypor lines undergo a rigorous selection process for conformation and physical attributes, an aspect we touched on earlier.



Weaning Capacity = Balance

This whole breeding focus as described here is what we in Hypor came to call breeding for “Weaning Capacity”.  By pursuing a balance in the sow, with the view of maximizing both the quantity and quality of pigs weaned, the improvements are gradual for all traits and in so doing we avoid compromising one trait for the sake of another.  In some cases, the choices are easy.  The point is that by combining several traits, even though some are negatively correlated, we can still progress to a better sow.

The bottom line is that good Weaning Capacity has to be built on the foundation of a good breeding program.  The message here was to show that Hypor’s breeding program has been built to address this.  As technology advances, there will be more tools available to contribute to this focus, and we in Hypor will be well placed to adopt them to even further enhance the Weaning Capacity philosophy.


Hypor Weaning Capacity
Spanish performance supports Weaning Capacity
Selecting for Improved Weaning CapacityCopyright © 2007 Hypor. Hypor is a    Company.
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mikey
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« Reply #1 on: August 15, 2008, 10:07:16 AM »

June 2008 - In recent research, Hypor R&D analyzed various new traits. One of them was Stay-ability. This trait is defined as the ability of the sow to stay in the breeding herd and is a good measure for longevity of sows. This trait combines robustness and production potential of the sow, i.e. for a sow to stay in the breeding herd she has to produce large enough litters and wean large numbers of good quality piglets. When this is combined with ability to breed again with short intervals and good quality of feet and legs, it leads to increased longevity.

Our analyses show that the heritability of stay-ability is approximately 10 to 15 percent, depending on line or breed. Stay-ability has favorable correlations with age at first mating, number of piglets born in total, percentage piglets born alive, percentage piglets weaned, and interval weaning mating. Genetic trends for stay-ability show a steady increase in all maternal lines over the last 20 years; approximately 2% per year (see Figure). The genetic progress of the last two decades has improved Hypor sows in such a way that they have a 40% higher probability to stay in the herd till their fourth parity. Staying in the herd until parity 4 guarantees that the sow is still in production when her production peak is to be expected.

Stay-ability is a trait that fits well in the Hypor philosophy of balanced breeding. It will lead to improved weaning capacity and more sustainable balanced production performance. Stay-ability will be included in the total index in the Hypor breeding program.

 

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mikey
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« Reply #2 on: August 15, 2008, 10:09:30 AM »

Tailoring boars for more uniformity in finishing pigs

by Benny van Haandel

Breeding Department, Hypor


Uniformity is most probably one of the most important traits determining the quality of a batch of finishing pigs. It has a large influence on throughput of pigs in finishing barns and value of pigs for a packing plant.


Various factors like diseases, feed and management have their influence on uniformity of pigs. Genetics is also one of the importnat factors determining uniformity. Using standardized genetics (F1 cross sow and a well established terminal sire line) can contribute to further improvement of uniformity of slaughter pigs. Development of synthetic lines and tailoring based on breeding values can take the focus on uniformity to a new level.

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