Abstract

Investigations were carried out concerning possible litter differences in locomotory ability and exterior conformation, and possible litter and sire group differences in the occurrence of skeletal lesions and in joint shape. The animals were from a breed experiment involving 6 litters, 8 feeding experiments involving 64 litters, and a selection experiment totalling 70 litters and 25 sire groups distributed in 3 lines. One hundred and twenty-one out of 285 P values for litter or sire group differences were statistically significant (P < 0.05). This shows, with reservations concerning the possibility that different environmental conditions up to 20 kg live weight may have produced a litter effect on pigs from the breed and feeding experiments, that heredity plays a significant part in the leg weakness complex. It seems justified to conclude that it partly is the inheritance of certain joint shapes and exterior conformational features, which influence the degree of joint lesions and locomotory ability and give rise to litter differences. This gives the theoretical possibility of selecting for more lasting joints and better locomotory ability using criteria based on joint shape and exterior conformation.

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