The effect of thermal environment and age on neonatal pig behavior

Citation
Bj. Hrupka et al., The effect of thermal environment and age on neonatal pig behavior, J ANIM SCI, 78(3), 2000, pp. 583-591
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Animal Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
ISSN journal
00218812 → ACNP
Volume
78
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
583 - 591
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8812(200003)78:3<583:TEOTEA>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Three experiments were conducted to evaluate the ability of a radiant envir onment and the presence of a littermate to attract pigs during the first 3 d of age. The effect of stimuli on pig movement was studied in an enclosed rectangular aluminum test chamber containing four similar sections that wer e heated independently. In Exp. 1, all sections were at 34.8 degrees C to e valuate the chamber for biases of where pigs located themselves at 1 (n = 2 4) and 2 d (n = 26) of age. More (P < .025) pigs settled (e.g., no movement for 7 mini in end sections than in middle sections. Age did not affect tim e to settle or settling location. The effect on pig location of heating one chamber end section to either 23, 40, 48, 56, or 64 degrees C and leaving the remaining sections unheated (24 degrees C) was determined in Exp. 2. Se ttling of pigs at 1 (n = 50) and 2 d (n = 50) of age was affected by temper ature (P < .001) but not by age. The minimum distance between average pig l ocation and the heated section occurred at 48 degrees C. Experiment 3 invol ved 15 pigs each at 1 and 3 d during a 1-h trial to compare the relative pi g attraction to 1) a heated chamber end section at 44.4 degrees C when rema ining sections were at 23.5 degrees C, 2) an anesthetized littermate in an end section when all sections were at 24.1 degrees C, or 3) a choice test i nvolving a 45.5 degrees C end section and an anesthetized littermate in the opposite end section with three unheated sections at 23.7 degrees C. Avera ge distance between the test animal and the heated section was greater (P < .01) than that between the test animal and an anesthetized pig. Pigs that were allowed a choice preferred to lie near an anesthetized littermate in a cold section rather than alone in a 45 degrees C section (P < .01), and th ey were less (P < .005) active when an anesthetized littermate was present in the chamber. Although radiant heat effectively attracted pigs, heat was less attractive than an anesthetized littermate. The greater attraction of pigs to a littermate than to radiant heat may explain why pigs remain near the sow and littermates during d 1 and 2 after birth.