Immunocastration is an interesting alternative to surgical castration in piglets. Studies have shown promising results in terms of production performance (e.g., maintaining adequate meat quality) also in heavy pig production; and improvement of animal welfare (e.g., preventing distress and pain caused by surgical castration). Aggressive and mounting behaviours, that often result in body lesions, seems to be reduced in light pig production; however, no studies have yet investigated animal welfare of heavy pigs subjected to immunocastration. This study aimed at evaluating the effect of immunocastration on welfare of heavy pigs by monitoring body lesions during growing and fattening period. Commercial-hybrid male pigs were randomly allocated to treatment groups: Immunocastration (IC; N=94), pigs receiving 4 doses of Improvac® at 15, 22, 32, and 36 weeks of age; Surgical Castration (SC; N=94), pigs surgically castrated at 4 days of age. IC and SC pigs received the same feeding regimen, they were housed in the same conditions and their management complied with Dir. 2008/120/EC. Before each Improvac® administration, body lesions were recorded through direct observations and scored on a three-point scale (none, mild, severe). Independent T-test was used to determine differences between groups at each considered time point. Before the first administration of Improvac® (15 weeks of age), IC pigs showed a significantly higher body lesion score (0.60±1.04) compared to SC (0.2±0.48) (P=0.001). The body lesion score remains higher in the other time points, but the difference between groups is not significant. A high level of agonistic behaviour before the suppression of testicular function suggests anticipating the vaccination protocol in relation to the onset of puberty and to increase the number of interventions in heavy pigs. Further research is needed to evaluate the sustainability of different timing of immunocastration, maintaining high level of animal welfare together with productive and economic benefits of the procedure.

Effect of immunocastration on body lesions in heavy pigs: preliminary results / E. Dalla Costa, G. Pesenti Rossi, A. Motta, M. Borciani, A. Gastaldo, G. Berteselli, E. Canali, M. Minero, S. Barbieri - In: Book of Abstracts of the 73rd Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science[s.l] : Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2022. - ISBN 978-90-8686-385-3. (( Intervento presentato al 73. convegno Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science tenutosi a Porto nel 2022.

Effect of immunocastration on body lesions in heavy pigs: preliminary results

E. Dalla Costa;G. Pesenti Rossi;G. Berteselli;E. Canali;M. Minero;S. Barbieri
2022

Abstract

Immunocastration is an interesting alternative to surgical castration in piglets. Studies have shown promising results in terms of production performance (e.g., maintaining adequate meat quality) also in heavy pig production; and improvement of animal welfare (e.g., preventing distress and pain caused by surgical castration). Aggressive and mounting behaviours, that often result in body lesions, seems to be reduced in light pig production; however, no studies have yet investigated animal welfare of heavy pigs subjected to immunocastration. This study aimed at evaluating the effect of immunocastration on welfare of heavy pigs by monitoring body lesions during growing and fattening period. Commercial-hybrid male pigs were randomly allocated to treatment groups: Immunocastration (IC; N=94), pigs receiving 4 doses of Improvac® at 15, 22, 32, and 36 weeks of age; Surgical Castration (SC; N=94), pigs surgically castrated at 4 days of age. IC and SC pigs received the same feeding regimen, they were housed in the same conditions and their management complied with Dir. 2008/120/EC. Before each Improvac® administration, body lesions were recorded through direct observations and scored on a three-point scale (none, mild, severe). Independent T-test was used to determine differences between groups at each considered time point. Before the first administration of Improvac® (15 weeks of age), IC pigs showed a significantly higher body lesion score (0.60±1.04) compared to SC (0.2±0.48) (P=0.001). The body lesion score remains higher in the other time points, but the difference between groups is not significant. A high level of agonistic behaviour before the suppression of testicular function suggests anticipating the vaccination protocol in relation to the onset of puberty and to increase the number of interventions in heavy pigs. Further research is needed to evaluate the sustainability of different timing of immunocastration, maintaining high level of animal welfare together with productive and economic benefits of the procedure.
No
English
Settore AGR/19 - Zootecnica Speciale
Riassunto di intervento a convegno
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
10.3920/978-90-8686-937-4
   Verifiche sperimentali su sistemi alternativi alla castrazione senza anestesia e analgesia nell’allevamento suino per il miglioramento del benessere animale (PORCASTRO)
   PORCASTRO
   REGIONE LOMBARDIA - Agricoltura
Book of Abstracts of the 73rd Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science
Wageningen Academic Publishers
2022
978-90-8686-385-3
Volume a diffusione internazionale
Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science
Porto
2022
73
Convegno internazionale
Intervento inviato
manual
Aderisco
E. Dalla Costa, G. Pesenti Rossi, A. Motta, M. Borciani, A. Gastaldo, G. Berteselli, E. Canali, M. Minero, S. Barbieri
Book Part (author)
reserved
274
Effect of immunocastration on body lesions in heavy pigs: preliminary results / E. Dalla Costa, G. Pesenti Rossi, A. Motta, M. Borciani, A. Gastaldo, G. Berteselli, E. Canali, M. Minero, S. Barbieri - In: Book of Abstracts of the 73rd Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science[s.l] : Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2022. - ISBN 978-90-8686-385-3. (( Intervento presentato al 73. convegno Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science tenutosi a Porto nel 2022.
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
9
Prodotti della ricerca::03 - Contributo in volume
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Abstract-EAAP-2022-immunocastration_DEF.pdf

accesso riservato

Descrizione: Accepted Abstract
Tipologia: Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Dimensione 113.16 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
113.16 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1080568
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
  • OpenAlex ND
social impact