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Effects of providing sensory attractants to suckling pigs during lactation and after weaning on post-weaning growth performance.

Authors :
Wensley, Madie R
Tokach, Mike D
Woodworth, Jason C
Goodband, Robert D
DeRouchey, Joel M
Gebhardt, Jordan T
McKilligan, Denny
Upah, Nathan
Source :
Translational Animal Science; 2023, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p1-11, 11p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Three experiments were conducted to determine the effect of sensory attractants pre- and post-weaning on the growth performance of pigs after weaning. For each experiment, treatments were arranged as a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial with main effects of pre-weaning application (without or with), post-weaning application (without or with), and body weight category (representing the lightest or heaviest 50% of the population). In Exp. 1, 356 nursery pigs (initially 5.7 kg) were used in a 28-d trial with enrichment cubes used as the sensory attractant. A greater percentage of heavy pigs (P   =  0.007) or pigs offered enrichment cubes pre-weaning (P   =  0.044) lost BW from weaning to d 3 compared to light pigs or pigs not offered enrichment cubes pre-weaning. From weaning to d 7, a greater percentage of pigs lost weight when not offered cubes post-weaning (P   =  0.002) compared to pigs offered cubes post-weaning. In Exp. 2, 355 nursery pigs (initially 5.6 kg) were used in a 29-d trial with a powder used as the sensory attractant. Providing a powder attractant both pre- and post-weaning reduced the percentage of pigs that lost weight from weaning to d 3 as compared with providing a powder either pre- or post-weaning only (interaction, P  < 0.05). In Exp. 3, 355 nursery pigs (initially 5.9 kg) were used in a 24-d trial with a liquid spray used as the sensory attractant. A greater percentage of heavy pigs that did not receive liquid attractant lost weight from weaning to d 3, whereas a greater percentage of light pigs lost weight when they received liquid attractant only pre-weaning (three-way interaction; P   =  0.016). Across all three experiments, sensory attractant application had limited effects on the growth performance of pigs after weaning; however, varying responses were observed for the percentage of pigs that lost weight in the first 3 to 7 d immediately post-weaning. In summary, environmental enrichment with cubes (Exp. 1) appears to have the greatest effect when applied post-weaning whereas flavor attractants (Exp. 2 and 3) appear to have the greatest effect when applied both pre- and post-weaning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25732102
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Translational Animal Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175011234
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/tas/txac170