June 18, 2013 - JSR
19-Jun-2013 (12 years 11 months 19 days ago)
It’s an age old problem, when the summer temperatures rise, fertility in pigs (and many other mammals) declines. It is nature’s way of limiting the number of offspring produced in the winter when the temperature is cold and food is in shorter supply.
Every pig farmer experiences the problem, to a greater or lesser degree, whether rearing indoors or out. The first indication is a higher proportion of gilts and sows returning to oestrus rather than progressing to pregnancy. Those that do proceed tend to produce smaller litters at farrowing. This in turn can lead to a shortage of animals to sell in late spring, just as price and demand is picking up for the start of the barbeque season.
Dr Grant Walling, Director of Science and Technology at JSR Genetics, explains that science so far has failed to provide an explanation or solution to the problem. However there are things that every producer can do now to minimise its effects.
“A major study we undertook recently with the University of Nottingham, School of Biosciences concluded that summer infertility does not appear to have a genetic cause and cannot therefore be influenced by selective breeding.
“There are however a number of things that every pig farmer can do, right away, to mitigate the problem. So here are my top tips to combat seasonal fertility decline:
