Thursday, September 3, 2015

Good legs linked to pigs’ reproductive performance

My father, Werner Romahn, always stressed the importance of good feet and legs when he was mating purebred Yorkshires on the farm where I grew up west of Kitchener.

It turns out he was ahead of his time.

A team of Swedish and Danish researchers has found that sows with good feet and legs have better reproductive performance.

They also found it’s a heritable trait.

Lame sows are believed to suffer from pain and stress which is reported to have a negative influence on reproduction.

They found they could pick out differences in pigs by  the time they are five months old.

"Significant genetic correlations were found between new toe quality and new overall score and the number of live-born piglets in the first parity (-0.35 and -0.31, respectively), indicating that sows with even toes and better overall leg score tend to have higher number of live-born piglets,” they write in a scientific journal.


The scientists from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Uppsala, Sweden, and Aarhus University, Denmark, published their findings in Livestock Science journal.