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Swine Nutrition and Management

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Feed represents 60-75% of the total cost of pork production ... of phytate in the digestive tract, making more P available (Cromwell, 1993, 1995) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Swine Nutrition and Management


1
Swine Nutrition and Management
  • AnS 225
  • Fall 2009

2
Introduction
  • Feed represents 60-75 of the total cost of pork
    production
  • Improvements in production (ADG, p/s/y, etc.)
    have led to changes in nutrient recommendations
  • Diets must be balanced to meet the pigs
    requirements
  • Diets may have a margin of safety to protect
    against nutrient deficiencies
  • Must be cost effective without wasting

3
Major Biological Processes Affected by Nutrient
Intake
  • Maintenance
  • Repair or replacement of body tissues and fluids
  • Voluntary (walking) and involuntary (heart
    contractions) activities
  • Generation of body heat for warmth
  • Regulation of immune systems
  • Growth
  • Production of body tissues (muscle, bone), organs
    (mammary glands), fluids (milk), fluid components
    (red blood cells)

4
Factors Affecting Nutrient Requirements
  • Environment
  • Temperature, weather, housing, competition
  • Breed, sex, and genetic background
  • Health status of the herd
  • Presence of molds, toxins, or inhibitors
  • Availability and absorption of dietary nutrients

5
Factors Affecting Nutrient Requirements
  • Variation of nutrient content and availability in
    the feed
  • Level of feed additives or growth promotants
  • Energy concentration in the diet
  • Level of feeding limit feeding vs. ad libitum

6
Energy
  • Mostly supplied by carbohydrates and fats
  • Cereal grains corn, milo, wheat, barley, and
    their by-products
  • Fat 2.25 X energy density of cereal grains
  • Most cereal grains and fats are palatable and
    digestible
  • Cereal by-products are more variable limited
    use in swine diets

7
Cereal Grains
  • Corn is primary energy source
  • Generally meet the pigs energy needs
  • Must be supplemented with
  • Amino acids (protein)
  • Vitamins
  • Minerals
  • Must determine adequate energy intake
  • If low-energy feeds are used or external factors
    limit feed intake
  • Pigs are limit fed sows and gilts

8
Additional Energy Sources
  • Milo equal substitute for corn primarily used
    in Southwest
  • Wheat excellent feed grain, usually not
    competitive in price
  • Barley more lysine but less energy and more
    fiber than corn
  • Oats more lysine, more fiber, limited use
  • Modified corn varieties selected for improved
    qualities
  • High-oil corn, high-lysine corn, etc.

9
Fat in Swine Diets
  • Choice white grease, beef tallow, corn oil,
    soybean oil
  • 2.25 X metabolizable energy of cereal grains
  • 3 5 fat in grow-finish diets will improve ADG
    and FE
  • Tends to increase backfat
  • Reduces dust and wear on equipment
  • Potential handling and storage problems quality
    can be an issue
  • Economic decision

10
Proteins andAmino Acids
  • Pig does not have a specific requirement for
    crude protein
  • Does have requirements for amino acids
  • Proteins are made up of different combinations of
    approximately 20 different amino acids
  • Proteins are broken down into amino acids that
    are absorbed into the bloodstream
  • Crude protein usually meets AA requirements
    must check if synthetic amino acids or
    by-products are used

11
Essential Amino Acids
  • 10 essential amino acids
  • Most cereal grains are limiting in lysine,
    tryptophan, threonine, and methionine
  • Level determines protein quality lysine is most
    important
  • Limiting amino acid protein synthesis cannot
    proceed beyond level of any essential amino acid
  • Deficiency results in lower ADG, reduced FE,
    unthriftiness, and reduced reproductive
    performance

12
Amino Acid Deficiency
  • Consider amino acids as the staves of a barrel
  • You can fill the barrel (growth rate) only to the
    level of the shortest stave

Methionine
Threonine
Isoleucine
Tryptophan
Lysine
Valine
13
Rain Barrel Concept
  • Shortage of an amino acid will limit growth and
    (or) reproductive performance

Methionine
Threonine
Isoleucine
Valine
Tryptophan
Lysine
14
Sources of Amino Acids
  • Plant sources
  • Soybean meal primary source in swine diets
  • Cottonseed meal
  • Corn gluten meal
  • Animal sources
  • Meat and bone meal
  • Tankage
  • Fish meal
  • Spray-dried blood meal early-weaned pig diets

15
Synthetic Amino Acids
  • Can reduce feed costs and maintain pig
    performance
  • Lysine and methionine are most common
  • Synthetic lysine can reduce soybean meal
    requirement must evaluate economics
  • Not used in gestation and lactation diets
  • Gestation poorly utilized if not fed ad libitum
  • Lactation decreases amount of other AA relative
    to lysine reduce litter weaning weights

16
Minerals
  • Role ranges from structural functions to wide
    variety of regulatory functions
  • Important for health and well-being of the pig
  • Importance increased with confinement due to
    reduced access to soil and forages
  • Macrominerals major minerals
  • Calcium, phosphorus, sodium, chlorine, magnesium,
    potassium
  • Microminerals minor or trace minerals
  • Zinc, copper, iron, manganese, iodine, selenium,
    chromium

17
Addition of Minerals to Swine Diets
  • Should not be added haphazardly
  • If a little is good, more is better does not
    hold true
  • Some minerals, if added in excess, will interfere
    with absorption of other minerals
  • All minerals have a toxic level
  • Impact on environment

18
Calcium and Phosphorus
  • Important in skeletal structure and development
  • Essential for blood clotting, muscle contraction,
    energy metabolism
  • Deficiency will result in impaired bone
    mineralization, reduced bone growth, and poor
    growth rate
  • Downer Sows may result if sows are fed diets
    low in Ca and P sows remove Ca and P from the
    bone, decreasing bone strength

19
Calcium and Phosphorus
  • Calcium
  • Most grains are low in calcium
  • Limestone is source of supplemental Ca
  • Phosphorus
  • Mainly supplied by dicalcium phosphate or
    monocalcium phosphate
  • Feeds of animal origin are high in calcium and
    available phosphorus
  • P content of cereal grains is mainly phytate
    phosphorus poorly utilized by swine

20
Phytate Phosphorus Unavailable Form of
Phosphorus
  • 50 to 70 of P in plant products is unavailable
    to the pig
  • Not digested and is excreted in manure
  • Excess phosphorus excretion into the environment
    formulate diets based on available P
  • Phytase enzyme that increases digestibility of
    phytate phosphorus
  • Use to reduce phosphorus excretions
  • Evaluate economics

21
Vitamins
  • Required for normal metabolic function
  • Development of normal tissues
  • Growth and maintenance
  • Some are produced by the pig, some are present in
    commonly used feed ingredients, several must be
    added to swine diets
  • Natural sources very few are used today
  • Green leafy plants, grasses, alfalfa
  • Less variety in feed ingredients to supply
    vitamins
  • Vitamin content of grain and protein sources may
    be unavailable or lost during storage

22
Important Vitamins
  • Fat-soluble
  • A, D, E, and K
  • Water-soluble or B-complex
  • Pantothenic acid
  • Riboflavin
  • Niacin
  • B12
  • Gestation/Lactation Diets
  • Folic acid, pyridoxine, choline, biotin
  • Synthetic vitamins added in form of vitamin premix

23
Changes in Vitamin/Mineral Nutrition
  • Increased confinement no access to growing
    crops and soil
  • Increased use of slotted floors less recycling
    of feces
  • Fewer protein sources in diets
  • Reduced daily feed intake in gestation
  • Early weaning of pigs diet is more critical
  • Availability of nutrients in heat-dried grains
    and feed ingredients varies widely

24
Water
  • Most essential and cheapest of all nutrients
  • Water deprivation
  • Reduces feed consumption, limits growth and feed
    efficiency, lowers milk production
  • Physiological functions
  • Temperature regulation
  • Transport of nutrients and wastes
  • Metabolic processes
  • Lubrication
  • Milk production

25
Water Requirements
  • Related to feed intake and body weight
  • 80 of BW at birth
  • 50 of BW in finished market pig
  • Pigs consume 1.5 to 2X as much water as feed
  • Need is increased with
  • High salt intake
  • High temperatures
  • Fever, diarrhea
  • Lactation
  • Wet feeding or liquid feeding
  • Improved FE and less water wastage in finishing
  • Potential for spoilage and mold problems

26
Wet-Dry Feeder
27
Feed Additives
  • Animal drugs antibiotics, dewormers
  • Withdrawal time
  • Growth-promoting minerals
  • Copper sulfate, zinc oxide
  • Enzymes phytase
  • Organic acids may improve digestibility for
    early weaned pigs
  • Probiotics organisms that stimulate growth of
    desirable organisms in the gut
  • Lactobacillus, streptococcus, etc.

28
Feed Processing Systems
  • Complete feed ready-to-feed product delivered
    to the farm
  • Grain and supplement (40 protein)
  • Base mix program everything except grain and
    protein
  • Premix program
  • Most precisely designed and cost-effective
  • Macro minerals, trace minerals, and vitamins
    added to protein and grain

29
Feed Budgeting
  • Changing diets based on calculated F/G rather
    than by visually estimating weight
  • If a pig should have a 21 F/G from 20 to 50 lb,
    then it should need 60 lb of feed.
  • Multiply number of pigs to be fed by amount of
    feed and deliver that amount.
  • When that feed allowance is used up, switch diets.

30
Evaluating Economics
  • Base price of ingredients is important
  • Cheapest diet is not always best
  • Evaluate cost/lb of gain
  • Numerous opportunities to evaluate and adjust
    diets

31
Nutrients of Primary Concern in Swine Waste
Nutrient Mgt.
  • Nitrogen
  • Amino Acids that comprise the Proteins required
    for life
  • Phosphorus
  • Mineral required for bone development, body
    function, health, etc.

32
Nutritional Approaches
  • High quality protein
  • Balance of amino acids in protein sources defines
    quality
  • Soybean meal and fish meal High Quality
  • Peanut meal and cottonseed meal Low Quality
  • Excess nitrogen excretion occurs when using too
    much low quality protein in feed
  • Most limiting AA can define the amount of protein
    included in a diet thus feeding protein to meet
    the most limiting AA can increase Nitrogen
    excretion

33
Nutritional Approaches
  • Dietary formulation
  • Formulate and balance diets to meet the Amino
    Acid requirement, rather than the Crude Protein
    requirement, for the optimal lean growth rate of
    the genetic type of pigs you raise
  • Crystalline lysine and methionine are generally
    cost effective
  • Synthetic threonine, valine, isoleucine,and
    tryptophan are available, but may not be cost
    effective
  • Lysine substituted for soybean meal reduces CP by
    2 in the diet and can result in a 20 to 25
    reduction in N excretion (Pierce et al, 1994)

34
On-Farm Strategies to Improve P Utilization and
Reduce P Excretion
  • Phosphorus excretion is Influenced by
  • Amount of phosphorus consumed
  • Excess fortification of P in diets was common in
    the past, but not wise and unjustified today
  • Form or bioavailability of the phosphorus in the
    diet
  • Phosphorus in the Phytate or phytic acid form is
    largely unavailable to swine because swine lack
    the intestinal enzyme phytase to break down the
    phytate
  • Large differences in bioavailability of
    phosphorus in common feedstuffs

35
Nutritional Approaches to Reducing Phosphorus
Excretion
  • Poultry and swine lack a critical enzyme
    (phytase) which releases phosphorus from phytic
    acid and makes it available for utilization
  • Approximately 2/3 of plant phosphorus is bound to
    phytic acid and is unavailable for utilization by
    both swine and poultry
  • Thus, inorganic P sources (Di-calcium phosphate,
    de-fluorinated phosphate) are added to diets

36
On-Farm Strategies to Improve P Utilization and
Reduce P Excretion
  • Addition of microbial phytase to swine diets
  • Aids degradation of phytate in the digestive
    tract, making more P available (Cromwell, 1993,
    1995)
  • releases 20 to 40 of the bound P in most
    ingredients
  • Phosphorus excretion decreased by 30 to 40 in
    finishing pigs (Pierce et al. 1997)
  • Phytase combined with a reduction from 0.6 P to
    0.5 P (inorganic) in the pig diet results in a
    20 to 50 reduction in Phosphorus excretion
  • In addition, Ca is more readily absorbed
    resulting in reduced Ca excretion

37
Ethanol By-products
  • Distillers Dried Grain with Solubles (DDGS)
  • DDGS differ across ethanol plants
  • Grain source
  • Fineness of grind
  • Cooking techniques
  • Dilution rate
  • Quality of the fermentation process
  • Ratio of solubles added to the grain fraction
  • Distillation and drying process, etc.
  • Mycotoxins

38
Nutrient Analysis
39
Feeding DDGS
  • Primarily replaces corn in the diet
  • Key is to balance diet for lysine, Ca, P
  • Nutrient variation is real issue
  • Reduced belly firmness, soft pork fat, meat
    quality?
  • Maximum inclusion rate
  • Nursery 25
  • Finishing 20
  • Gestation 50
  • Lactation 20

40
Benefits of Using DDGS in Swine Diets
  • Often an economical partial replacement for
  • corn
  • soybean meal
  • dicalcium phosphate
  • Large supply available where hogs are produced
  • Unique properties
  • reduce P excretion in manure
  • increase litter size weaned/sow
  • gut health benefits

Source Shurson, U of MN
41
Current DDGS Feeding Practices
  • Used almost exclusively in grow-finish diets
  • 10 inclusion most common
  • Gut health benefits frequently observed
  • Up to15 to 20 inclusion
  • When competitively priced
  • Need to supplement with synthetic amino acids
  • Limited use in sow feeds
  • Perceived risk of mycotoxins
  • 10 inclusion when used
  • Limited use in nursery feeds
  • Lower amino acid content/nutrient density vs
    other ingredients
  • Limited formulation space in high nutrient dense
    diets
  • 5 inclusion when used

Source Shurson, U of MN
42
Large Pen Finishing
43
Farmweld Auto-Sort System
44
Farmweld Auto-Sort System
45
Lounging/Sleeping Area
46
Food Court
47
Sorting by Weight
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