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Research article2014Peer reviewedOpen access

Genetic trends in maternal and neonatal behaviors and their association with perinatal survival in French Large White swine

Canario, Laurianne; Bidanel, Jean-Pierre; Rydhmer, Lotta

Abstract

Genetic trends in maternal abilities were studied in French Large White sows. Two lines representing old-type and modern-type pigs were obtained by inseminating modern sows with semen from boars born in 1977 or 1998. Successive generations were produced by inter-semating. The maternal performance of sows from the second generation was compared in farrowing crates. Video analysis was performed for the 1st h after the onset of 43 and 36 farrowing events, and for the 6 first hours for 23 and 21 events, in old-type and modern-type sows, respectively. Genetic trends were estimated as twice the difference in estimates between the 2lines. The contribution of behavior to the probability of stillbirth and piglet death in the first 2days was estimated as the percentage of deviance reduction (DR)due to the addition of behavior traits as factors in the mortality model. Sow activity decreased strongly from the 1st to the 2nd h in both lines (P<0.001). In the first 6 h, old-type sows sat (1st parity), stood (2nd parity) and rooted (both parities)for longer than modern-type sows, which were less active, especially in 2nd parity. In modern-type sows, stillbirth was associated positively with lying laterally in the first 6 h (4.6% DR)and negatively in the 1st h (9.1% DR). First-parity old-type sows were more attentive to piglets(P=0.003) than modern-type sows which responded more to nose contacts at 2nd parity(P=0.01). Maternal reactivity of modern-type sows was associated with a higher risk of piglet death (4.6% DR). Respiratory distress at birth tended to be higher in modern-type piglets than in old-type piglets (P<0.10) and was associated with a higher risk of piglet death in both lines (2.7-3.1% DR). Mobility at birth was lower in modern-type than old-type piglets (P<0.0001). Genetic trends show that sow and piglet behaviors at farrowing have changed. Our results indicate reduced welfare in parturient modern-type sows and their newborn piglets.

Keywords

maternal behavior; piglet vitality; farrowing; genetic trend; sow

Published in

Frontiers in Genetics
2014, Volume: 5, article number: 410
Publisher: Frontiers Research Foundation / Frontiers Media

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Genetics and Breeding

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2014.00410

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/66496