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2021
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Our climate is regularly changing. Since industrial revolution, global temperature has increased to 1.5°C. Numerous health and environmental challenges troublesome the swine industry worldwide. Heat stress (HS) during summer is one seasonal condition that has an immensely negative effect on pig farmers which may let stifle their profitability if proper management strategies are not adopted in time. Heat stress (HS) is being one of the largest impediments to efficient animal agriculture which causes changes in behavior, physiology, and metabolism of animals. It causes serious health impacts that result in diminished performance, especially in breeding herds and finisher pigs, eventually, economic losses for the farmer.
Animal Production Science, 2015
Heat stress negatively influences the global pork industry and undermines genetic, nutritional, management and pharmaceutical advances in management, feed and reproductive efficiency. Specifically, heat stress-induced economic losses result from poor sow performance, reduced and inconsistent growth, decreased carcass quality, mortality, morbidity, and processing issues caused by less rigid adipose tissue (also known as flimsy fat). When environmental conditions exceed the pig’s thermal neutral zone, nutrients are diverted from product synthesis (meat, fetus, milk) to body temperature maintenance thereby compromising efficiency. Unfortunately, genetic selection for both increased litter size and leaner phenotypes decreases pigs’ tolerance to heat, as enhanced fetal development and protein accretion results in increased basal heat production. Additionally, research has demonstrated that in utero heat stress negatively and permanently alters post-natal body temperature and body composi...
Virginia Cooperative Extension Small-Scale and Niche Market Pork Production Bullletin, 2014
The effects of elevated environmental temperatures on pigs may be severe for any operation, but can be particularly detrimental in small-scale or niche market settings. Raising pigs outdoors or in buildings that offer little in the way of environmental control exposes these animals to high temperatures and heat stress. Heat stress is the combined effect of all environmental conditions that raise an animal’s core body temperature above their upper critical temperature limit, such that behavioral and/or physiological changes are necessary to return the animal to a normal body temperature. Heat strain, then, is the animal’s behavioral and physiological responses to heat stress. In swine, heat stress can cause reproductive failure in the breeding herd and decreased growth performance in grow-finish hogs, and ultimately decrease profitability through increased production losses and additional expenses. In 2003, production losses and additional expenses due to heat stress cost swine farmers in Virginia over $1.8 million. Producers must strive to maintain swine in a comfortable environment that is as close as possible to temperatures within the animal’s thermal comfort zone. The purpose of this paper is to present current knowledge of swine physiology, management, and technology as it relates specifically to heat stress in small operations, with the goal that small-scale and niche market pork producers may more effectively implement heat abatement strategies that allow high levels of productivity and profitability during the hot summer months.
animal
Heat stress is a global issue constraining pig productivity, and it is likely to intensify under future climate change. Technological advances in earth observation have made tools available that enable identification and mapping livestock species that are at risk of exposure to heat stress due to climate change. Here, we present a methodology to map the current and likely future heat stress risk in pigs using R software by combining the effects of temperature and relative humidity. We applied the method to growing-finishing pigs in Uganda. We mapped monthly heat stress risk and quantified the number of pigs exposed to heat stress using 18 global circulation models and projected impacts in the 2050s. Results show that more than 800 000 pigs in Uganda will be affected by heat stress in the future. The results can feed into evidence-based policy, planning and targeted resource allocation in the livestock sector.
Translational Animal Science, 2020
Heat stress has negative impacts on pork production, particularly in the grow-finish phase. During heat stress events, the feeding behavior of pigs is altered to reduce heat production. Several different systems have been developed to study feeding behavior. Most systems are not accurate representations of grow-finish commercial production as feed intake is monitored for only one pig at a time. The objective of this study was to utilize a feed monitoring system, representative of commercial conditions, to determine feeding behavior patterns of grow-finish pigs throughout the year and to identify changes that occurred during heat stress events. Feeder visit data were collected on barrows and gilts (n = 932) from three different sire breeds, Landrace, Yorkshire, and Duroc, between May 2014 and April 2016. Days in the study were partitioned into groups based on their maximum temperature–humidity index (THI), where a THI less than 23.33 °C was classified as “Normal”, a THI between 23.33...
The effects of temperature level (24, 28, 32, 36°C) and breed (Creole vs. Large White) on physiological responses during acclimation to heat stress were studied in 2 experiments on a total of 144 barrows. In the first experiment, Large White (LW) pigs were kept at 24°C for 10 days and thereafter at 24, 28, 32 or 36°C for 20 days. In the second experiment, LW and Creole (CR) pigs were kept at 24°C for 10 days and thereafter at 31°C for 20 days. In both experiments, the relative humidity was fixed at 80%. Rectal temperature (RT), cutaneous temperature (CT) and respiratory rate (RR) were used as criteria to characterize the acclimation response. This response was analyzed using a bilinear model. The threshold day (Td) which marked the beginning of the acclimation response was not affected by temperature level but the rate of RT decrease after Td (v2) increased at 36°C (-0.025 vs. -0.015 °C/°C on average at 28 and 32°C). In the second experiment, Td value for RT was 0.35 d lower in CR p...
Swine Housing II, 2003
Current ASAE standards of heat and moisture production are based primarily on data collected nearly four decades ago. Feedstuffs, swine practices, growth rate, and lean percentage have changed considerably in that time period and have a substantial effect on both heat and moisture production. In fact, recent research has shown that high-lean gain swine are more susceptible to high environmental temperatures-partially due to increased heat production. This increase in heat production cannot be met physiologically through increased sensible heat loss (i.e. surface area); therefore, latent heat loss must increase. Furthermore, synthetic amino acids can more closely match diet composition with swine nutrient requirements, and reduce heat production and nitrogen loss. This paper reviews the genetic, nutritional, and environmental effects on heat and moisture production of growing-finishing swine, and identifies the areas that need further investigation.
Frontiers in animal science, 2022
Veterinaria México OA, 2022
Heat stress induces failures in the physiological mechanisms that regulate the body temperature of farm animals and causes a loss in their productive and reproductive potential. Thus, we performed a scoping review to systematically map, describe, and classify primary research that assessed the effect of heat stress on the reproductive, physiological, and productive parameters of livestock. Electronic databases were searched to retrieve full text, peer-reviewed experimental or cohort studies published from 1980 to August 2018. We included in vivo and in vitro studies exposing animals or cells to heat stress conditions and used a control group. Studies were evaluated based on title and abstract and then selected for final inclusion based on full text. We performed data charting to describe and visualize the evidence. In total, we included 466 studies, among which bovines and pigs were the most frequent species studied. Reproductive and physiological parameters were the main groups of outcomes assessed, and studies using adult females predominated. Seventy percent of the studies were experimental, and almost half of the studies used natural environmental conditions to assess the effect of heat stress in animals. Most of the studies were performed in the Americas and Asia, and three journals provided one-third of the publications. The systematic evidence synthesis presented herein outlines the trends of research performed to assess the effect of heat stress on livestock and allowed us to define future secondary studies to extend our knowledge about the negative impact of heat stress on the productivity of farm animals..
International Journal of Bio-resource and Stress Management
production traits may increase an animal's susceptibility to high environmental temperatures (Nardone et al., 2010).
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