Abstract
Abstract Recognizing and balancing trade-offs that constitute sustainability, economics, and practical reality is essential for practice adoption. There are many situations where producers have aligned all three criteria. Advancement of in-barn practices such as water cups compared to nipple drinkers provides for improved water conservation and economics. Also, injection of manure slurry directly into the soil decreases atmospheric nitrogen losses, reduces phosphorus runoff, reduces or eliminates inorganic fertilizer applications, and improves soil health and fertility. The use of dietary synthetic amino acids to lower nitrogen excretion or feed additives such as phytase to lower phosphorus excretion are widely used and are economical sustainable practices. Increasing whole farm productivity through improved pig survivability is a means to achieve a win-win tradeoff. Improving pig survivability with advancements in-barn management practices, genetic selection, health and nutritional programs will directly impact the sustainability of pork producers. However, everyday examples are also present where these criteria conflict. The use of feed by-products in diets to reduce feed cost per pig are common. However, these types of dietary ingredients, in particular dried distiller grains with solubles (DDGS) is lower in protein digestibility then soybean meal and corn, thus increases nitrogen excretion. At a higher inclusion such as 30% of the diet, the nitrogen excretion level would be raised by approximately 15%. Also, as the value of corn oil has increased for other industries, ethanol plants are extracting more oil from DDGS, in turn the net energy concentration is lowered. This results in pigs having poorer feed efficiency, thus increasing total manure production. Thus, the economic feed cost advantage has a tradeoff with increased nitrogen excretion and manure production. Pork producers will continue to be progressive and create opportunities to further combine sustainability, economics, and practical reality of implementation.
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