Critical Success Factors In Reproduction And Breeding Pigs


by Sarah B - Date: 2010-06-24 - Word Count: 269 Share This!

Biosecurity may be the most important factor to consider when starting your pig herd. It is important to buy sows and gilts (young female swine) that come from reputable sources to help prevent disease and other problems from entering the farm. The same holds true in you decide to purchase or rent a boar for breeding. Sharing pigs between multiple operations increases the potential for disease to enter into the operation. The profitability of keeping a pig on your farm will also need to be addressed. If you cannot or do not want to deal with a pig, artificial insemination is certainly an option and even has some advantages: it minimizes disease risk, is convenient, and allows for the selection of superior genetics.

Good reproductive management of your herd will be important to your success. Genetics will influence important traits such as litter size, litter weights, growth rate, feed efficiency, back fat thickness, pork quality and structural correctness.

If you plan to farrow at specific time of year, you must consider the timing of when you breed your sows. The information that follows should help you make that timing decision. The estrous cycle in sows and gilts is the time between the onset of the next. The cycle length is normally 21 days but can range from 18 to 24 days. Length of estrus or heat, varies and may last from only 12 hours in gilts to 60 hours or more in sows.

The average gestation length, or time from conception until farrowing is 114 days. During gestation, the piglet grows into a fully formed individual, weighing from 3 to 3.5 pounds.

Related Tags: breeding pigs, pig reproduction, pig breeding

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