Finding Ways to Feed Pigs for Less
This article was originally published on June 7, 2012 and expired on July 7, 2012. It is provided here for archival purposes and may contain dated information.
Results of a preliminary
experiment conducted at the University of Illinois indicate that it may be
possible to select pigs that can make efficient use of energy in less expensive
feed ingredients, thus reducing diet costs.
Less expensive feed is usually
higher in fiber than the corn-soy diets typically used in U.S. swine
production, explained Hans H. Stein, professor of animal sciences at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. However, the white breeds that are
used in commercial pork production use only about 40 percent of the insoluble
fiber. "If you can increase that number to 50 or 60 or 70 percent, then of
course, you would get a much better use of the energy in those
ingredients," Stein explained.
"The white breeds have been
selected for high efficiency and rapid gain for many, many generations,"
Stein continued. "But that's all based on corn-soy diets. However, there
are also indigenous breeds of pigs that have not been selected for commercial
production, and these breeds have, therefore, not been fed the corn-soybean
meal diets for as many generations as the white breeds."
Among those indigenous breeds
are Meishan pigs, which have been raised in China for many centuries. Stein's
hypothesis was that these pigs, which have not been selected for efficiency and
rapid weight gain, would use fiber more efficiently than the white breeds.
Stein and his team compared the
fiber digestion of Meishan pigs with that of two groups of Yorkshire pigs. They
tested four diets that used high-fiber ingredients: distillers dried grains
with solubles (DDGS), soybean hulls, sugar beet pulp, and pectin. When fed
DDGS, the values for apparent total tract energy digestibility were higher for
the Meishan pigs (83.5%) than for either weight-matched (77.3%) or age-matched
(78.8%) Yorkshire pigs. Researchers observed no significant difference in
energy digestibility for the other ingredients.
"What we observed was that,
particularly for the DDGS diets, the Meishans were quite a bit more effective
at using that fiber," Stein said. "That diet is high in insoluble
dietary fiber. When we looked at more soluble fibers, there was no difference."
Although Meishan pigs would
never be used for commercial pork production in the United States, the results
indicate that differences exist among breeds of pigs. Thus, it is possible that
differences also exist among the white breeds and that some may use fibers more
efficiently than others.
Stein stressed that this study
was preliminary and said that determining if white breeds can be bred to use
insoluble fiber more efficiently will be quite costly because it requires
selecting pigs for multiple generations. Stein said that he and colleagues at
the University of Illinois' Institute for Genomic Biology are pursuing funding
for further research.
"I think it is exciting
that there are some pigs that can use fiber better than we have thought in the
past, and I think this will open up opportunities to think in different ways
about how we can feed pigs economically," he said.
The study was published in a
recent issue of the Journal of Animal Science and was co-authored with former
graduate student Pedro Urriola.
Source: Hans Stein, Swine Nutrition, hstein@illinois.edu
Pull date: July 7, 2012
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