Abstract

Data on ovulation rate, litter size, fetal and placental weights and weight and length of uterine horns were taken at 23, 42 or 63 days of pregnancy on 138 Yorkshire, Landrace and Lacombe multiparous sows bred to Yorkshire, Landrace and Hampshire boars to produce purebred and crossbred litters. Of the 53 Yorkshire sows slaughtered, 13.2% were non-pregnant, compared to 7.5 and 8.5% for the Landrace and Lacombe sows, respectively. The average number of corpora lutea was 15.1 in Landrace, one more than in Lacombe and Yorkshire sows. Embryonic mortality in crossbred litters was 7.5 and 6.0% higher in Landrace sows than in Yorkshire and Lacombe sows, respectively. In purebred litters, it was 8.4% higher in Landrace than in Yorkshire. Litters sired by Yorkshire boars were 7.8% larger in number than those sired by Landrace or Hampshire boars. At 23 days of pregnancy, 19% of the ova released in the three breeds were lost. A further loss of 4% was noted at later stages. The weights of Landrace and Lacombe embryos were significantly (P < 0.05) heavier than those of Yorkshire at the 3 days of pregnancy studied. Crossbred embryos of Yorkshire and Landrace were heavier than purebreds by 27, 8 and 6% at the 23, 42 and 63 days of pregnancy, respectively. Weights of the uterine horns and placental membranes were heavier in Landrace and Lacombe than in Yorkshire sows. Little difference was found between Landrace and Lacombe breeds in embryonic, placental and uterine weights. Highly significant correlations (r = 0.65, 0.57 and 0.76) were found between placental and embryonic weights at the 3 days of pregnancy. Correlation between number of viable embryos and length of uterine horn was 0.30 and that with weight of horn was 0.10.

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