Causes of increased number of culled pregnant sows

Enric Marco
17-Aug-2021 (4 years 9 months 20 days ago)

Culled pregnant sows are those sent to the slaughterhouse for various problems after having been serviced. The percent of sows culled among sows serviced should always be less than 2%.

There can be multiple causes, but the most frequent problems are reproductive, locomotive, and others. It is common for pregnant sows to be culled as a result of poor planning of services (and/or management of replacement females), that is, when sows are serviced in conditions in which they should not be serviced: lameness, having more than two returns to estrus, poor body condition, after having had a late abortion, etc. These sows are much more likely to lose their gestation, which will later force them to be culled.

Finding out what could be the cause for culling pregnant sows is not always easy, and it depends on the quality of the notes taken for the culling reasons.

Are there problems with returns to estrus or abortions?

Are there lameness problems?

<p>Hoof problems</p>

Are there problems with dead sows?

All causes leading to sow death can also be the cause of euthanasia during gestation.

Use the flow chart to continue your troubleshooting or to access other parts of the tool.

<p>Types of gestation losses that can lower the farrowing rate, detailing the different types of returns to estrus based on when they occur.</p>