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Data on the effects of the anionic protein meal BioChlor(Ⓡ) on sows before and after farrowing
Three hundred and two parity 3 and 4 sows were allocated to one of three treatment groups: A (n=106): Control group fed the standard lactation diet; B (n=94): Lactation diet supplemented with 10 kg BioChlor/T; C (n=102): Lactation diet supplemented with 20 kg BioChlor/T. The sows were randomly alloc...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10164756/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37168594 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2023.109168 |
Sumario: | Three hundred and two parity 3 and 4 sows were allocated to one of three treatment groups: A (n=106): Control group fed the standard lactation diet; B (n=94): Lactation diet supplemented with 10 kg BioChlor/T; C (n=102): Lactation diet supplemented with 20 kg BioChlor/T. The sows were randomly allocated to treatment on entry to the farrowing shed at 100 d of gestation. The numbers allocated to each treatment were not equal with fewer sows allocated to treatment B at the start of treatment feeding than originally intended. Six allocated sows were not pregnant at their due farrowing date and two control group sows died after treatment feeding commenced prior to farrowing. All sows were individually housed in sow stalls and were fed 3 kg of their treatment diet once a day from d 105 of gestation. At d 110 of gestation, sows were moved into farrowing crates and continued to be fed 3 kg of their treatment diet once a day until the day of farrowing followed by ad libitum feeding of the treatment diet during a 27-d lactation. Approximately 50 litters from each treatment were randomly weighed to determine treatment effects on piglet average daily gain from birth to weaning. Litters were standardized within treatment to 10 piglets per litter at d 3 of lactation by allocating piglets from sows within treatment that had more than 12 piglets. After weaning, all sows were transported to a commercial module and mated on the first display of estrus. Sows were offered a common boar shed diet (13.8 MJ DE/kg; 170 g protein/kg; 9 g lysine/kg) ad libitum from weaning to mating. Following mating, all animals were fed 2.5 kg of a gestation diet (13.0 MJ DE/kg; 125 g protein/kg; 6 g lysine/kg) until farrowing. All sows were stalled individually during the gestation period following treatment feeding. Measures included: date of birth, number of piglets stillborn, number of piglets born alive, total number of piglets born, number of mummified feti, litter weight and number of piglets weighed at birth, litter weight and number of piglets at d 3, 14, and 26, number of piglets stillborn (gestation 2), number of piglets born alive (gestation 2), and total number of piglets born (gestation 2). The number of piglets born alive, number of total piglets born, and all weight measures were analyzed with mixed models with treatment as a fixed effect and sow within farrowing house as a random effect. A negative binomial model was used to estimate the incidence of still birth with sow within farrowing house as a random effect. For the odds of being re-mated a logistic regression mixed model was used to evaluate differences among treatment groups. These data provide information on an individual animal basis that can be used to inform pig producers, nutritionists, veterinarians, and researchers for further investigation on the use of anionic feeds in gestation diets of pigs and is suitable for future meta-analyses. |
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