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Maintaining continuity of nutrient intake after weaning. I. Review of pre-weaning strategies. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Weaning in swine production involves significant stress that affects piglet behavior and feed intake due to their developing gastrointestinal, immune, and nervous systems.
  • Implementing strategies such as weaning older pigs, providing creep feed, and allowing preweaning socialization can help reduce nutrient disruption and improve immediate feed intake postweaning.
  • While these strategies show promise for improving piglet growth and reducing mortality, their adoption is limited by labor, cost, and logistical challenges in farrowing house adjustments.

Article Abstract

Weaning is a crucial phase of swine production marked by a multitude of biological and environmental stressors, which have a significant impact on immediate postweaning behavior and feed intake (FI). During this time, the piglet's gastrointestinal (GI) system is also undergoing extensive epithelial, immune, and nervous system development. In this review, our objective is to describe the different preweaning strategies that can be used to minimize nutrient intake disruption and improve FI in the immediate postweaning period. Reducing nutrient disruption postweaning can be accomplished through the implementation of management and nutritional strategies. Research consistently demonstrates that weaning older, more developmentally mature pigs helps prevent many of the adverse GI effects associated with weaning stress. Providing creep feed to pigs during lactation is another reliable strategy that has been shown to increase immediate postweaning FI by acclimating pigs to solid feed prior to weaning. Likewise, socialization by allowing pigs to mix before weaning improves social skills, minimizing mixing stress, and aggression-related injury immediately postweaning. Supplemental milk replacer has also been shown to elicit a positive response in preweaning growth performance, which may help to reduce preweaning mortality. While socialization and milk replacer are acknowledged to ease the weaning transition, these strategies have not been widely adopted due to labor and application challenges. Additionally, the cost of milk replacer and logistics of retrofitting farrowing houses to accommodate litter socialization have limited adaptation. Further exploration of maternal nutrition strategies, particularly fetal imprinting, is needed to better understand the implications of perinatal learning. Other areas for future research include, combining environmental enrichment with feeding strategies, such as large destructible pellets or play feeders, as well as determining at what time point producers should start socializing pigs before weaning. While more research is needed to develop strategic preweaning management programs, many of the strategies presented in this review provide opportunities for producers to minimize nutrient intake disruption by preventing feed neophobia, reducing stress, and easing the wean pig transition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7963027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txab021DOI Listing

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