Abstract

One-hundred-twenty crossbred gilts from two experiments were assigned randomly to a 2 X 5 factorial experiment. Gilts were reared in two environments (confinement or outside) and assigned to be slaughtered at 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 mo of age. Beginning at 6 mo of age, blood samples were taken at weekly intervals from each gilt via venipuncture. Serum concentrations of progesterone were analyzed to determine when gilts attained puberty. On the day prior to slaughter, six pigs within a treatment group were cannulated and blood samples were taken at 20-min intervals for 4 h. At slaughter, follicular fluid (FF) was aspirated and the volume determined from those follicles having a diameter of at least 4 mm. No effect of environment was found on the proportion of gilts that attained puberty by 8 mo of age. For the 12 gilts that reached puberty during the study, the age at puberty for gilts reared in outdoor lots (202 +/- 5 d) was less (P less than .05) than those reared in confinement (224 +/- 8 d). Mean concentrations of serum luteinizing hormone (LH; P = 98) and number of secretory spikes of LH (P = .76) were similar between gilts reared in confinement and those reared in outdoor lots. No differences in average serum concentrations of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) or number of secretory spikes of FSH were found between gilts subjected to these environments (P = .95). Concentrations of estradiol-17 beta in FF were not affected by environment or age (P greater than .25).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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