Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T00:53:32.187Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A comparison of the nursing and suckling behaviour of group- and individually-housed sows and their litters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

M. J. Bryant
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture and Horticulture, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 2AT
P. Rowlinson
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture and Horticulture, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 2AT
H. A. M. Van der Steen
Affiliation:
Department of Agriculture and Horticulture, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 2AT
Get access

Abstract

Nursing frequency, suckling duration and teat order were recorded in 12 ‘hybrid’ sows and their litters from parturition to weaning at day 42 post partum. Sows and their litters were moved from the farrowing quarters at day 20; half were housed as a group (G) and fed ad libitum with a boar present and the other half were housed individually (S) with no boar present and ration-fed to scale.

Some differences occurred in behaviour from day 20. A significantly greater number of false nursing periods, significant synchronization of nursing periods, and a tendency for more long and short nursing intervals occurred in G than S sows and litters. The duration of the preliminary nosing phase and the total nursing period were significantly longer in S than G litters. Teat order scores, indicating consistency of piglet suckling position on the sow, tended to be greater in S than G litters, and there was a fall in the score for G litters in the weeks following grouping. This was associated with a check in live-weight gain.

All G sows showed oestrus during lactation, on average 15 days after grouping. There was no incidence of lactational oestrus in the S sows which showed oestrus 5 days after weaning.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bryant, M. J., Palmer, G., Pfthfrick, D. J. and Rowlinson, P. 1983. Lactational oestrus in the sow. 4. Variation in the incidence and timing of lactational oestrus in groups of sows. Anim. Prod. 36: 453460.Google Scholar
Bryant, M. J., Rowlinson, P. and Van der steen, H. A. M. 1974. Rebreeding sows during lactation. II. A comparison of nursing and suckling behaviour between single- and group-housed sows. Proc. 3rd int. Congr. Int. Pig Vet. Soc, Lvon, pp. C6·1–C6·5.Google Scholar
Crighton, D. B. 1970. The induction of pregnancy during lactation in the sow. J. Reprod. Pert. 15: 457459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crighton, D. B. and Lamming, G. E. 1969. The lactational anoestrus of the sow: the status of the anterior pituitary-ovarian system during lactation and after weaning. J. Endocr. 43: 507509.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hillyer, M. 1976. Suckling sows in groups. Pig Fmg 24 (6): 5253.Google Scholar
Lightfoot, A. L. 1974. A comparison of two farrowing and rearing systems for piglets. Proc. Br. Soc. Anim. Prod., New Ser. 3: 98 (Abstr.).Google Scholar
Parvizi, N., Elsaessfr, F., Smidt, D. and Ellendorff, F. 1976. Plasma luteinizing hormone and progesterone in the adult female pig during the oestrous cycle, late pregnancy and lactation, and after ovariectomy and pentobarbitone treatment. J. Endocr. 69: 193203.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Petchey, A. M., Dodsworth, T. L. and English, P. R. 1978. The performance of sows and litters penned individually or grouped in late lactation. Anim. Prod. 27: 215221.Google Scholar
Peters, J. B., First, N. L. and Casida, L. E. 1969. Effects of pig removal and oxytocin injections on ovarian activity and pituitary changes in mammillectomized post-parlum sows. J. Anim. Sci. 28: 537541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robison, W. L. 1918. Mating sows before their litters are weaned. Ohio Monthly Bull. 3: 142143.Google Scholar
Rowlinson, P., Boughton, H. G. and Bryant, M. J. 1975. Mating of sows during lactation: observations from a commercial unit. Anim. Prod. 21: 233241.Google Scholar
Rowlinson, P. and Bryant, M. J. 1981. Lactational oestrus in the sow. 1. The effect of the interval between farrowing and grouping on the incidence and timing of lactational oestrus in sows. Anim. Prod. 32: 315323.Google Scholar
Rowlinson, P. and Bryant, M. J. 1982a. Lactational oestrus in the sow. 2. The influence of group-housing, boar presence and feeding level upon the occurrence of oestrus in lactating sows. Anim. Prod. 34: 283290.Google Scholar
Rowlinson, P. and Bryant, M. J. 1982b. Lactational oestrus in the sow. 3. The influence of feeding level upon the occurrence of a fertile oestrus in lactating sows. Anim. Prod. 35: 4953.Google Scholar
Rowlinson, P., Bryant, M. J. and Van der steen, H. A. M. 1977. The possible role of suckling behaviour in explaining the occurrence of lactational oestrus in sows. Anim. Prod. 24: 155 (Abstr.).Google Scholar
Signoret, J. P., Baldwin, B. A., Fraser, D. and Hafez, E. S. E. 1975. The behaviour of swine. In The Behaviour of Domestic Animals. 3rd ed. (ed. Hafez, E. S. E.), pp. 295329. Bailliere Tindall, London.Google Scholar
Smith, D. M. 1961. The effect of daily separation of sows from their litters upon milk yield, creep intake and energetic efficiency. N.Z. Jl agric. Res. 4: 232245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Steen, H. A. M., Rowlinson, P. and Bryant, M. J. 1974. Suckling behaviour in sows and their litters and the effect of a group-rearing system. Ir. Thesis, Univ. Wageningen.Google Scholar
Van Loen, A. and Molenaar, B. A. J. 1967. A behavioural study in pigs. Methodology in measuring the evolution of the teat order. Tijdschr. Diergeneesk. 92: 297307.Google Scholar