PSVII-9 The Impact of Increasing Dietary Manganese on the Reproductive Performance of Sows
Author(s) -
Clint E. Edmunds,
Alyssa S Cornelison,
C. Farmer,
Christof Rapp,
Valerie E. Ryman,
Wes P Schweer,
Mark E. Wilson,
C Robert Dove
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of animal science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.928
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1525-3015
pISSN - 0021-8812
DOI - 10.1093/jas/skac064.294
Subject(s) - lactation , weaning , zoology , randomized block design , biology , pregnancy , chemistry , horticulture , genetics
The objective of this study was to determine the effect of dietary manganese (ProPath Mn, Zinpro Corporation) on the reproductive performance of sows. Sows (N = 39; 231 ± 8 kg) were randomly assigned to 1 of three dietary levels of Mn (CON: 0 ppm Mn; PRO20: 20 ppm Mn; PRO40: 40 ppm Mn). Experimental treatments were initiated at breeding and continued through 2 parities. Sows were blocked by parity within each farrowing group and dietary treatments were represented within each block. Data were analyzed as a randomized complete block design using the MIXED procedure of SAS with diet as a fixed effect and block as a random effect. Dietary treatment did not affect sow body weights (P > 0.10). Lactation feed intake was increased in PRO20 sows compared with CON and PRO40 sows (P < 0.05). PRO20 and PRO40 sows farrowed heavier piglets (CON 1.23 kg; PRO20 1.57 kg; PRO40 1.40 kg; P = 0.001) with improved average daily gain to weaning (CON 213 g/day; PRO20 237 g/day; 220 g/day; P < 0.05), compared with CON sows. Milk fat content (average from d 7 and 14 of lactation) was reduced in PRO20 (5.5%) and PRO40 sows (6.1%; P < 0.05) compared with CON sows (7.8%), possibly due to increased milk demand from the piglets. There were no significant differences in milk mineral concentrations during lactation or piglet tissue Mn-superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) activity at weaning (P > 0.10). On day 3 of lactation, prolactin concentrations were similar across treatments (P > 0.10), whereas progesterone concentrations tended to differ in response to Mn level (CON 23.70 ng/mL; PRO20 26.15 ng/mL; PRO40 22.10 ng/ml; P = 0.09). Supplementary dietary Mn throughout 2 gestation and lactation cycles led to increased birth weights and pre-weaning growth of piglets.
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