44 research outputs found

    Djurmaterialets betydelse i ekologisk grisproduktion

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    De djur som anvÀnds i ekologisk grisproduktion i Sverige idag Àr selekterade för hög produktion i konventionell miljö. I den hÀr studien vill vi ta reda pÄ om dessa djur Àven Àr de bÀsta i ekologisk miljö. Det gör vi genom att undersöka om det finns genotyp-miljö-sampel för slaktgrisegenskaper mellan ekologisk och konventionell miljö. Om det finns sÄdana samspel sÄ Àr inte de bÀsta grisarna i konventionell miljö de bÀsta grisarna i ekologisk miljö och dÄ finns det behov av ett eget ekologisk avelsarbete (Rydhmer m fl, 2003). MÀrkning och tatuering av smÄgrisar hos smÄgrisproducenten, identifiering av slaktkropparna pÄ slakteriet och insamling av slaktkroppsdata gÄr att genomföra i fÀlt. Rangeringen mellan galtar efter ekologiskt fenotypiskt produktionsvÀrde och konventionellt produktionsavelsvÀrde skiljer sig, vilket tyder pÄ att det kan finnas genotyp-miljö-samspel för slaktgrisegenskaper mellan ekologisk och konventionell produktion

    A Pilot Study in Sweden on Efficacy of Benzylpenicillin, Oxytetracycline, and Florfenicol in Treatment of Acute Undifferentiated Respiratory Disease in Calves

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    Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) is a major indication for antibiotic treatment of cattle worldwide and some of the antibiotics used belong to classes of highest priority among those listed by WHO as critically important for human medicine. To preserve the efficacy of "newer" antibiotics, it has been suggested that "older" drugs should be revisited and used when possible. In this pilot study, we evaluated the efficacy of benzylpenicillin (PEN), oxytetracycline (OTC), and florfenicol (FLO) for treatment of naturally occurring BRD on two farms raising calves for slaughter. Farm personnel selected calves for enrolment, assigned calves to one of the three regimens in a systematically random manner, treated the calves, and registered the results. Overall, 117 calves were enrolled in the study. Nineteen calves relapsed in BRD before slaughter and were retreated (16.2%) and three died (2.6%). For PEN, treatment response rates after 30 days, 60 days, and until slaughter were 90.2%, 87.8%, and 80.5%, respectively; for OTC, 90.0%, 85.0%, and 85.0%, respectively; and for FLO, 86.1%, 83.3%, and 77.8%, respectively. There were no statistically significant differences in relapse, mortality, or response rates between the three treatment regimens. This indicates that PEN, OTC, and FLO were equally effective for treatment of BRD but the results need to be confirmed in a more elaborate study with a higher statistical power. The findings support the current recommendations from the Swedish Veterinary Association and the Medical Products Agency to use benzylpenicillin as a first line antibiotic for treatment of calves with undifferentiated respiratory disease in Sweden. Due to differences in the panorama of infectious agents and presence of acquired antibiotic resistance, the findings might not be applicable in other geographical areas

    Impact of amount of straw on pig and pen hygiene in partly slatted flooring systems

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    Background: Straw is a beneficial enrichment material for pigs, shown to improve welfare through reducing tail biting. Straw has previously been identified as one of the means of how to raise pigs without tail docking, through improving natural exploratory behaviour. Straw has however been linked to poor pen hygiene, making farmers reluctant to use straw and has largely not been implemented in commercial farming worldwide. Straw is a beneficial enrichment material for pigs, shown to improve welfare and reduce abnormal behaviour such as tail biting. Results: This study investigates the impact of straw on pig and pen hygiene in pens with partly slatted floor in three grower and four finishing pig batches on five commercial farms (2329 pigs, 211 pens) in Sweden which were providing straw daily. Each batch was divided into two treatments; Control: 50-600g straw/pen/day based on the farm normal straw ration; and Extra straw; (=doubled Control ration). The pens were scored based on cleanliness of the pigs, solid and slatted pen floor every second week. The pig and pen hygiene were mostly scored as clean in both treatments, overall around 1% of the observations were considered dirty/soiled. Conclusions: As very few pens or pigs were considered dirty, it was concluded that straw provision is possible without risking poor pig and pen hygiene. Few observations in this study were considered dirty regardless of amount of straw that was provided, and had likely to do with other factors in the production rather than straw ration. These results implies that straw could be used in partly slatted pens in order to improve pig environment but more research is needed to quantify the impact of other external factors related to climate (e.g. temperature, humidity, velocity)

    Shoulder ulcers in sows are genetically correlated to leanness of young pigs and to litter weight

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    The aim of this study was to estimate the heritability for shoulder ulcers (SU) and body condition (BCw) of sows at weaning, and the genetic correlations between these traits and some production and reproduction traits included in the current breeding goal of sow lines. The analyses were based on data on Swedish purebred Yorkshire from nucleus as well as multiplier herds. The estimated heritabilities were for BCw 0.21, and for SU 0.13. Significant genetic correlations were found between sidefat thickness (at 100 kg) and BCw (thicker fat layer at 100 kg – better condition at weaning), between sidefat thickness and SU (thicker fat layer – less SU), between litter weight at 3 weeks and BCw (heavier litter – lower body condition), between litter weight at 3 weeks and SU (heavier litter – more SU). The genetic correlation between BCw and SU was also significant (lower body condition – more SU)

    Dental disorders in sows from Swedish commercial herds

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    Knowledge on dental disorders in commercial sows is limited although such conditions may have important animal welfare implications. In a pilot study, the dental and periodontal health of 58 sows (Landrace*Yorkshire-crosses) from 8 Swedish commercial pig herds, slaughtered at one abattoir, were investigated. The oral cavity was inspected and abnormalities were recorded on a dental chart modified for pigs. Dental abnormalities, absence of teeth, supernumerary teeth, tooth fractures, signs of caries, and malalignment were recorded. The study revealed that 19% of the sows had supernumerary teeth and 59% of the sows missed at least one tooth. Periodontitis, calculus and malalignment were observed in 33%, 45% and 17%, respectively. Tooth wear was very common both in incisors (total 83%) and in premolars/molars (total 84%). One or more tooth fractures (between 1 and 6 per sow) was found in 41%. Signs of caries was found in 9%. In order to assess oral health, three indices were used: calculus index (CI), periodontal index (PDI) and tooth wear index (TWI). Severe periodontitis, tooth wear in incisors and tooth wear in premolars/molars were found in 7%, 34% and 35%, respectively. With respect to animal welfare, the etiology and the effects of the disorders on health, stress and pain need to be investigated

    Leg health, growth and carcass characteristics in growing-finishing pigs of two different genotypes reared on Swedish organic farms

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    Increased prevalence of joint abnormalities at slaughter among pigs from organically certified herds in Sweden has been reported. Most of these abnormalities are caused by osteochondrosis, which has a genetic background. Thus, we investigated whether changing the sire breed from the commonly used Hampshire to the commercially available sire breed Duroc affected joint health and growth rate. We studied 766 commercially reared growing-finishing pigs from insemination of the mother sow until slaughter. The pigs were raised at four commercial organic farms (integrated or externally integrated, and had 40–160 sows in production)and slaughtered at one slaughter plant. We found no significant difference between the offspring of the two sire breeds regarding back conformation, leg conformation, swollen joints, locomotion or lameness at 13 or 24 weeks of age, or regarding joint abnormalities at slaughter. This indicates that clinical leg health will not be improved by changing sire breed. However, the Hampshire-sired pigs had higher daily growth rate(P< 0.008), allowing earlier slaughter

    The early-life environment of a pig shapes the phenotypes of its social partners in adulthood

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    Social interactions among individuals are abundant, both in natural and domestic populations, and may affect phenotypes of individuals. Recent research has demonstrated that the social effect of an individual on the phenotype of its social partners may have a genetic component, known as an indirect genetic effect (IGE). Little is known, however, of nongenetic factors underlying such social effects. Early-life environments often have large effects on phenotypes of the individuals themselves later in life. Offspring development in many mammalian species, for example, depends on interactions with the mother and siblings. In domestic pigs, individuals sharing the same juvenile environment develop similar body weight later in life. We, therefore, hypothesized that offspring originating from the same early-life environment also develop common social skills that generate early-life social effects (ELSEs) that affect the phenotypes of their social partners later in life. We, therefore, quantified IGEs and ELSEs on growth in domestic pigs. Results show that individuals from the same early-life environment express similar social effects on the growth of their social partners, and that such ELSEs shape the growth rate of social partners more than IGEs. Thus, the social skills that individuals develop in early life have a long-lasting impact on the phenotypes of social partners. Early-life and genetic social effects were independent of the corresponding direct effects of offspring on their own growth, indicating that individuals may enhance the growth of their social partners without a personal cost. Our findings also illustrate how research devoted to quantifying IGEs may miss nongenetic and potentially confounded social mechanisms which may bias the estimates of IGEs

    Growth rates in thoroughbred foals

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    Data of 798 Thoroughbred horses foaled in 1988 to 1992 in Co. Kildare, Ireland were examined in a study to provide detailed information on a range of parameters on normal growth and development from birth to 20 months of age (onset of training). Based on average body weight gain, the pattern of growth in Thoroughbred horses destined for flat racing could be divided into four phases; each was characterized by markedly different growth rate. However, this pattern was not observed for withers height where the rate gradually declined following an initial rapid growth in the first 6 months of age. Differences of body weight and height at the withers between normal and DOD-affected horses were not significant (P>0.05). These investigations appear to indicate that the body weight and withers height and their rates of growth were not critical in causing developmental skeletal problems. This is contrary to most other studies which suggested that the rate of growth is related to many developmental skeletal abnormalities in young Thoroughbred horses

    Stored Stallion Sperm Quality Depends on Sperm Preparation Method in INRA82 or INRA96

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    Removal of seminal plasma facilitates stallion sperm survival during storage, but washing may damage sperm chromatin. Therefore, sperm quality was compared in samples following single-layer centrifugation (SLC) or sperm washing and controls (extension only) in two extenders, INRA82 and INRA96. Ejaculates from six stallions were split among six treatments: SLC, sperm washing, and controls, in INRA82 and INRA96. Sperm motility and acrosome status were evaluated at 0, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours; morphology at 0, 24, 48, 72 hours and chromatin integrity at 0 and 96 hours, with storage at 6 degrees C. Sperm samples in INRA96 had better motility, acrosome status, and normal morphology than samples in INRA82. The SLC samples had higher motility and fewer reacted acrosomes than controls, and lower fragmented chromatin than washed samples. Fewer spermatozoa with tail defects were observed after SLC than after sperm washing; spermatozoa washed in INRA82 had fewer tail defects than those washed in INRA96. In conclusion, sperm quality (except for morphology) was better in INRA96 than in INRA82 and was better in SLC samples than in washed samples or controls. The SLC method is a useful adjunct to stallion sperm preparation, especially for storage before artificial insemination. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc
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