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Poster De Conférence Année : 2016

Impact of poor hygiene on health and performance of pigs divergently selected for feed efficiency

Résumé

Production diseases impair production efficiency and animal welfare. Pigs with improved productive traits are suspected to be more at risk to develop diseases because of a lower capacity to allocate their nutritional resources for health. The aim of this study was to assess health and performance of two pig lines divergently selected for feed efficiency and housed in good or poor hygiene environment. Poor hygiene is known to induce inflammatory disorders and reduce growth performance. Large-White male and female pigs (n=160) from 80 to 160 days of age were included in a 2×2 factorial design comparing 2 lines divergently selected for Residual Feed Intake (low RFI=more efficient and high RFI=less efficient) and housed in 2 hygienic conditions (clean (C) vs dirty (D), n=40/group). The experiment was divided in two successive periods: during the challenging period, from Week 0 (W0) to W6, pigs were either housed in C or D conditions; blood was collected at W0, W3 and W6. During the recovery period, from W6 to W12, all pigs were housed in clean conditions. Half of the pigs in each group were euthanized at W6 and the remaining pigs were euthanized at W12 to collect tissue and evaluate body composition. Throughout the experiment, pigs were individually penned and had free access to a standard growing diet. Body weight and signs of clinical diseases (cough, diarrhea, lameness) were weekly recorded. Blood was collected to assess indicators of inflammation (haptoglobin, blood formula) and metabolite concentrations. Prevalence of pleurisy and pneumonia at slaughter was greater for D than C pigs. Average daily gain (ADG) from W0 to W6 was lower in D than C pigs, and this reduction was greater for the high RFI line (-247 g/d) than for low RFI line (-107 g/d). At W3, D pigs exhibited greater blood haptoglobin and neutrophil contents than C pigs, showing that poor hygiene condition induced an inflammatory response. Disparities were observed between the two lines with higher haptoglobin in high RFI pigs and higher amount of neutrophils in low RFI pigs. From W6 to W12, ADG and health blood biomarkers did not differ between D and C pigs, suggesting that pigs had recovered. In conclusion, low RFI pigs were less affected by the environmental challenge, which disagrees with our initial hypothesis. Data to be obtained on metabolite concentrations and expression levels of genes related to immunity will allow determining if the line differences in the ability to cope with this sanitary challenge were related to differences in resource allocation, immune capacities or growth precocity.
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Dates et versions

hal-01594944 , version 1 (26-09-2017)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-01594944 , version 1
  • PRODINRA : 362190

Citer

Alexandra Chatelet, Elodie Merlot, Florence Gondret, Hélène Gilbert, Nathalie Le Floc'H. Impact of poor hygiene on health and performance of pigs divergently selected for feed efficiency. 16. International Conference on Production Diseases in Farm Animals (ICPD), Jun 2016, Wageningen, Netherlands. Wageningen Academics Publishers, 2016, 16th International Conference on Production Diseases in Farm Animals. Book of abstracts. ⟨hal-01594944⟩
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