Dm. Weary et al., Alternative housing for sows and litters: 2. Effects of a communal piglet area on pre- and post-weaning behaviour and performance, APPL ANIM B, 65(2), 1999, pp. 123-135
We conducted an experiment to determine how allowing piglets access to a co
mmunal area affects pre-weaning and post-weaning behaviour and performance.
Litters were housed in pens with sows in crates until piglets reached 11 d
ays of age. For 10 experimental cohorts, barriers between the pens of three
litters were removed allowing piglets to mingle freely in a central area.
For the 10 control cohorts (also three litters each), litters were not allo
wed to mix before weaning. There was little aggression when experimental li
tters were allowed to mix, and piglets played and rested in mixed-litter gr
oups. Time spent in the common area increased from approximately 20% just a
fter mixing (12 days old) to approximately 45% at day 26 (week 4; P < 0.001
). Experimental piglets were nursed less often than controls,,especially du
ring the later stages of lactation (P < 0.01). However, there was no differ
ence in the amount of creep feed consumed or rate of weight gain before wea
ning. After weaning, experimental piglets ate more solid food than controls
(approximately 70 g/day more during the second week after weaning, P < 0.0
5), and showed a non-significant tendency to gain more weight (approximatel
y 50 g/day). As a second comparison, piglets were either kept in single lit
ter groups after weaning, or mixed with other litters from the same cohort.
When control litters were mixed after weaning, piglets spent almost 60% mo
re time in aggressive behaviour than when litter-mates were kept together,
but no such difference occurred for the experimental litters (interaction P
< 0.05). Thus, the experimental housing treatment allows for mixing at an
early age (much as occurs in nature) with little apparent conflict, provide
s piglets with a socially enriched pre-weaning environment, and helps avoid
fighting between mixed piglets at weaning. The system also slightly lowers
demands on the sow during lactation (in terms of a reduced nursing frequen
cy) and slightly increases intake of solid food by piglets after weaning. (
C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.