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PHYSIOLOGY SYMPOSIUM: Postnatal consequences of in utero heat stress in pigs 1, 2.

Authors :
Johnson, Jay S
Baumgard, Lance H
Source :
Journal of Animal Science. Feb2019, Vol. 97 Issue 2, p962-971. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Postnatal heat stress negatively impacts pig productivity and well-being as animals attempt to manage the resultant strain response. This is especially true when postnatal heat stress is combined with production stressors (e.g. mixing, weaning, transport, handling, and isolation) that have the potential to increase disease occurrence, morbidity and mortality. While pigs can utilize adaptive physiological mechanisms to compensate, these are often unfavorable to efficient livestock production. Specifically, postnatal heat stress decreases weight gain, reduces growth and production efficiency, alters carcass composition, and increases morbidity and mortality. Consequently, decreased animal performance constrains profitability and affects economic sustainability. In addition to the negative effects of postnatal heat stress, prenatal heat stress has long-term consequences that may compromise future piglet well-being and performance. Pigs gestated under heat stress conditions have an increased postnatal stress response and an increase in maintenance energy requirements. Furthermore, prenatal heat stress decreases swine birth weight, and increases teratogenicity, core body temperature set-point, and alters postnatal body composition (more adipose tissue and less skeletal muscle). Taken together, the effects of heat stress during pre- and postnatal pig development negatively influences productivity and well-being, a scenario that threatens the sustainability of global swine production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218812
Volume :
97
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Animal Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137253865
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jas/sky472