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1.
Increasing litter size has led to introduction of so-called nurse sows in several EU countries. A nurse sow is a sow receiving piglets after having weaned her own piglets and thereby experiencing an extended lactation. In order to analyse whether nurse sows have more welfare problems than non-nurse sows a cross-sectional study was conducted in 57 sow herds in Denmark. Clinical observations were made on nurse and non-nurse sows and their litters. The clinical observations were dichotomized and the effect of being a nurse sow was analysed based on eight parameters: thin (body condition score<2.5), swollen bursae on legs, dew claw wounds, vulva lesions, poor hygiene, poor skin condition, shoulder lesions and cuts and wounds on the udder. Explanatory variables included in the eight models were: nurse sow (yes=1/no=0), age of piglets (weeks old, 1 to 7), parity (1 to 8+) and all first order interactions between these three variables. The effect of using nurse sows on piglet welfare was analysed with five models. The outcomes were: huddling, poor hygiene, lameness, snout cuts and carpal abrasions. The explanatory variables included in the five models were: nurse sow (yes=1/no=0), age of piglets (weeks old, 1 to 7), parity (1 to 8+) and all first order interactions between these three variables. Herd identity was included as a random factor in all models. The nurse sows had a significantly higher risk of swollen bursae on legs (P=0.038) and udder wounds (P=0.001). No differences in risk of being thin or having shoulder lesions were found. Foster litters had significantly higher risk of being dirty (P=0.026) and getting carpal abrasions (P=0.024) than non-foster litters. There was a tendency for higher lameness in foster litters than in non-foster litters (P=0.052). The results show that nurse sows and their piglets to some extent experience more welfare problems than non-nurse sows with piglets at a similar age.  相似文献   

2.
Sex allocation theory has been a remarkably productive field in behavioral ecology with empirical evidence regularly supporting quantitative theoretical predictions. Across mammals in general and primates in particular, however, support for the various hypotheses has been more equivocal. Population‐level sex ratio biases have often been interpreted as supportive, but evidence for small‐scale facultative adjustment has rarely been found. The helper repayment (HR) also named the local resource enhancement (LRE) hypothesis predicts that, in cooperatively breeding species, mothers invest more in the sex which assists with rearing future offspring and that this bias will be more pronounced in mothers who require extra assistance (i.e., due to inexperience or a lack of available alloparents). We tested these hypotheses in captive cotton‐top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus) utilizing the international studbook and birth records obtained through a questionnaire from ISIS‐registered institutions. Infant sex, litter size, mother's age, parity, and group composition (presence of nonreproductive subordinate males and females) were determined from these records. The HR hypothesis was supported over the entire population, which was significantly biased toward males (the “helpful” sex). We found little support for helper repayment at the individual level, as primiparous females and those in groups without alloparents did not exhibit more extreme tendencies to produce male infants. Primiparous females were, however, more likely to produce singleton litters. Singleton births were more likely to be male, which suggests that there may be an interaction between litter size adjustment and sex allocation. This may be interpreted as supportive of the HR hypothesis, but alternative explanations at both the proximate and ultimate levels are possible. These possibilities warrant further consideration when attempting to understand the ambiguous results of primate sex ratio studies so far.  相似文献   

3.
During late pregnancy concentrations of relaxin, progesterone (P) and estradiol-17β (E) in maternal plasma were measured in gilts with small litters of intact, hypophysectomized, partially hypophysectomized or dead fetuses and in gilts with litters of normal fetuses and numbers. To achieve a small litter size at parturition all but one or two fetuses were killed at surgery at Day 30 to 40 of gestation. Fetal hypophysectomy or sham procedures were attempted on Day 90 to 95. Gestation was prolonged in gilts carrying hypophysectomized or partially hypophysectomized fetuses (P<0.01). Lactation and farrowing did not occur if hypophysectomy was complete. Basal concentrations of E in plasma were lower (P<0.01), basal P appeared higher and basal relaxin was unchanged in gilts carrying hypophysectomized or dead fetuses as compared to gilts with intact fetuses. Near the end of pregnancy the concentration of E was 119.8 pg/ml in gilts with the normal number of fetuses, 32.6 pg/ml in the group with hypophysectomized fetuses, and 7.3 pg/ml in gilts with dead fetuses. The relaxin peak occurred near term in control pigs and was delayed in the groups with hypophysectomized and partially hypophysectomized fetuses. The concentration of relaxin at the peak in gilts with normal sized litters was 181.4±75.8 ng/ml as compared with 25.3±16.0 ng/ml in gilts with partially hypophysectomized fetuses and was 9.5±1.4 ng/ml in gilts with hypophysectomized fetuses and 10.6±3.3 ng/ml in gilts with one or two fetuses. In gilts with intact or partially hypophysectomized fetuses, or litters containing both types, which came into labor, the patterns of P and E were similar. In gilts with hypophysectomized fetuses, P and E at term showed little change from basal concentrations. The results confirm that the fetus influences basal concentrations of E and possibly P in late normal gestations. In addition, the presence of the fetal pituitary is associated with the peak in relaxin expected at term. These associations are likely to be related to pituitary function and/or the mass of the conceptus. Fetal hypophysectomy is clearly associated with maternal concentrations of P and E at Day 114 that are different from those in normal sows, suggesting that these two hormones may have an effect on the initiation of parturition in the pig.  相似文献   

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