Timing of dietary zinc additions during gestation for improved piglet survival.

IF 1.3 Q3 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
Translational Animal Science Pub Date : 2024-03-08 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/tas/txae030
Kelsey L Hammers, Pedro E Urriola, Mark Schwartz, Moon-Suhn Ryu, Andres Gomez, Lee J Johnston
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Abstract

The objectives of this study were to determine a practical approach to feeding elevated dietary zinc (Zn) to gestating sows in a commercial setting and to confirm preweaning mortality could be reduced by feeding high Zn to sows during different periods of gestation. The study was conducted at a commercial sow farm in the upper Midwest. Mixed parity sows (n = 267) over three consecutive weekly farrowing groups (sows farrowing within 1 wk) were assigned randomly to one of the three dietary treatments within parity. Treatments consisted of: (1) control sows fed a corn-soybean meal diet containing 206 mg/kg total supplemental Zn supplied by zinc hydroxychloride; (2) breed-to-farrow: as control + 147 mg/kg supplemental Zn as ZnSO4 (353 mg/kg total supplemental Zn) fed from 5 d after breeding to farrowing; and (3) day 110-to-farrow: as control fed from breeding to farrowing + 4,079 mg/kg supplemental Zn as ZnSO4 (4,285 mg/kg total supplemental Zn) starting day 110 of gestation until farrowing. At farrowing, individual piglets were weighed and identified within 12 h of birth. Data were analyzed using PROC GLIMMIX of SAS and the model considered the fixed effect of dietary treatment and random effect of farrowing group. Dietary treatments did not affect number of total pigs born per litter. For breed-to-farrow sows, there was an increase in the percentage of pigs born alive compared to sows fed the control and day 110-to-farrow treatments (P < 0.001). The number of stillborn pigs expressed as a percentage of total litter size at birth decreased for breed-to-farrow sows (P < 0.001) compared with control or day 110-to-farrow sows. Mortality of low birth weight piglets from birth to weaning did not differ among dietary treatments (P = 0.305); however, a trend for decreasing post-natal mortality (P = 0.068) of normal birth weight pigs was observed for pigs born to sows fed elevated Zn 5 d before farrowing. In conclusion, feeding elevated Zn to sows throughout gestation increased the proportion of pigs born alive suggesting that elevated gestational Zn intake makes piglets more robust to endure the stresses of farrowing and decreases intrapartum mortality. Under the conditions of this study, elevated Zn intake of sows did not influence piglet post-natal survival. However, feeding high zinc throughout gestation may decrease piglet mortality during the parturition process.

在妊娠期适时添加日粮锌以提高仔猪存活率
本研究的目的是确定在商业环境中给妊娠母猪饲喂高浓度日粮锌的实用方法,并确认在妊娠的不同时期给母猪饲喂高浓度日粮锌可降低断奶前死亡率。该研究在美国中西部上部的一家商业母猪养殖场进行。在三个连续的每周产仔组(母猪在 1 周内产仔)中,混合奇数母猪(n = 267)被随机分配到奇数内的三种日粮处理中的一种。处理包括:(1) 对照组母猪饲喂玉米-豆粕日粮,其中含有 206 毫克/千克由盐酸锌提供的总补充锌;(2) 种猪到母猪组母猪饲喂玉米-豆粕日粮,其中含有 147 毫克/千克由盐酸锌提供的总补充锌:(3) 第 110 天至产仔:与对照组一样,从配种后 5 天至产仔期间饲喂 + 147 毫克/千克补充锌(以 ZnSO4 计)(补充锌总量为 353 毫克/千克);以及 (3) 第 110 天至产仔:与对照组一样,从配种至产仔期间饲喂 + 4,079 毫克/千克补充锌(以 ZnSO4 计)(补充锌总量为 4,285 毫克/千克),从妊娠第 110 天开始饲喂,直至产仔。产仔时,在出生后 12 小时内对每头仔猪进行称重和鉴定。使用 SAS 的 PROC GLIMMIX 对数据进行分析,模型考虑了日粮处理的固定效应和产仔组的随机效应。日粮处理对每窝出生的总猪数没有影响。与饲喂对照组和第 110 天到产仔处理的母猪相比,饲喂品种到产仔处理的母猪所产猪只的活产率有所提高(P P P = 0.305);然而,在产仔前 5 天饲喂高锌处理的母猪所产猪只中,正常出生体重猪只的产后死亡率呈下降趋势(P = 0.068)。总之,在整个妊娠期给母猪饲喂高锌饲料可提高出生活猪的比例,这表明妊娠期锌摄入量的增加可使仔猪更强壮,以承受分娩的应激,并降低产期死亡率。在本研究的条件下,提高母猪的锌摄入量不会影响仔猪的产后存活率。然而,在整个妊娠期饲喂高锌饲料可能会降低分娩过程中的仔猪死亡率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Translational Animal Science
Translational Animal Science Veterinary-Veterinary (all)
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
15.40%
发文量
149
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Translational Animal Science (TAS) is the first open access-open review animal science journal, encompassing a broad scope of research topics in animal science. TAS focuses on translating basic science to innovation, and validation of these innovations by various segments of the allied animal industry. Readers of TAS will typically represent education, industry, and government, including research, teaching, administration, extension, management, quality assurance, product development, and technical services. Those interested in TAS typically include animal breeders, economists, embryologists, engineers, food scientists, geneticists, microbiologists, nutritionists, veterinarians, physiologists, processors, public health professionals, and others with an interest in animal production and applied aspects of animal sciences.
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