营养与母猪繁殖。

F. Aherne, R. Kirkwood
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引用次数: 1

摘要

繁殖率被定义为每年或每个繁殖周期生产的活仔数。繁殖能力受首次成功交配时的年龄、每次交配时的排卵率和胚胎存活率、活产仔数、活猪数和母猪定期成功繁殖的能力影响。综上所述,在正常的饲养和管理条件下,营养对后备母猪繁殖能力的影响很小。然而,为了获得青春期较年轻的优势,最大的排卵率和足够的脂肪覆盖(如果只是为了确保避免随后的管理不良),后备母猪应该在交配时自由喂养。最大限度地减少活体重和脂肪储备的波动,从而避免极端的身体状况和随后的糟糕表现,从而达到长期表现的最佳效果。这是通过在怀孕期间控制母猪体重的小幅增加和哺乳期间每天有限时间的喂饱来实现的。假设母猪在哺乳期间没有达到非常糟糕的状况,那么妊娠期间的饲喂水平对仔猪出生数的影响很小,对仔猪出生重的影响有限。仔猪出生重受总采食量的影响大于饲料分配方式的影响,这一结论是不容质疑的。哺乳采食量对断奶后的生产性能有显著影响,低水平的采食量会延长剩余时间间隔,并可能增加胚胎死亡率。断奶后高水平喂养没有任何益处,除非可能是初产母猪或在之前的哺乳期间经历过活重和身体状况严重损失的母猪。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nutrition and sow prolificacy.
Prolificacy has been defined as the number of viable piglets produced per year or per breeding lifetime. Prolificacy is influenced by age at first successful mating, ovulation rate and embryo survival at each mating, number of live born, viable pigs and the sow's ability to be successfully remated at regular intervals. It is concluded that under normal conditions of feeding and management nutrition will have a minimal influence on gilt prolificacy. However, to gain the advantages of a slightly younger age at puberty, maximal ovulation rate and an adequate fat cover (if only to ensure against subsequent poor management), gilts should be fed ad libitum up to the time of mating. Long-term performance is best served by minimizing fluctuations in live weight and fat reserves, so avoiding extremes of body condition and subsequent poor performance. This is achieved by small controlled increases in sow body weight during pregnancy and feeding to appetite for restricted periods each day during lactation. Assuming the sow has not achieved a very poor condition during lactation, feeding level during pregnancy will have little effect on numbers of piglets born, and only a limited influence on piglet birthweights. The conclusion that piglet birth weights will be influenced more by total pregnancy feed intake than pattern of feed distribution is unchallenged. Lactation feed intake is shown to have marked effects on the post-weaning performance, low-level feeding leading to an extension of the remating interval and possibly increasing embryo mortality. No benefit of high-level feeding after weaning is demonstrable, except possibly in primiparous sows or sows having suffered an extreme loss of liveweight and body condition during the previous lactation.
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