Animals (Oct 2020)

Comparison of the Productivity of Primiparous Sows Housed in Individual Stalls and Group Housing Systems

  • Yejin Min,
  • Yohan Choi,
  • Joeun Kim,
  • Doowan Kim,
  • Yongdae Jeong,
  • Younghwa Kim,
  • Minho Song,
  • Hyunjung Jung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10111940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 1940

Abstract

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This study was conducted to provide commercial pig farms with information about group housing systems for sows in accordance with the amendment of the prohibition law for individual stalls for sows in South Korea. Therefore, this experiment was performed to compare the effects of individual stalls (IS) and group housing systems (GS) on the productivity of sows to investigate the feasibility of replacing individual stalls with group housing systems in commercial sow units. Forty primiparous sows (Landrace × Yorkshire; 210.67 ± 2.22 kg average initial body weight) were randomly assigned to four treatments with restricted feeding after 8 weeks from artificial insemination. The four treatments were (i) individual stalls (IS; housed in pen stalls), (ii) short stalls (SS; sows housed in pens with non-gated feeding stalls), (iii) free access stalls (FAS; a non-competitive housing system), and (iv) electronic sow feeders (ESF; used with radio frequency identification technology to allow individual sow management without individual confinement). All sows were transferred to farrowing crates at 110 days of gestation. There were no differences in sow productive performance, reproductive performance, and colostrum composition between IS and GS and among GS. The considered GS did not negatively affect any productivity parameters of primiparous sows compared with IS; the GS could replace IS in commercial sow units.

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