Abstract

ABSTRACTAn experiment involving 320 gilts was conducted to investigate the effects of age and growth traits on puberty attainment and reproductive performance in gilts given boar stimulation with or without exogenous gonadotropins. Following ad libitum feeding during rearing, groups of gilts were stimulated for puberty at one of four ages, namely 130, 150, 170 or 190 days. Within each age group, gilts were selected to maximize the variation in live weight, relocated, mixed and allocated to two treatments in a randomized-block design: (a) mature boar contact (boars only) and (b) boar contact plus an intramuscular injection of 400 i.u. pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin + 200 i.u. human chorionic gonadotropin (boars + PG600). Gilts were mated at puberty and slaughtered at 35 days post coitum.For the gilts on the boars-only treatment, the interval from stimulation to puberty decreased significantly (P < 0·05) and became less variable with ascending age at stimulation. Increasing live weight at a given age also reduced the interval from stimulation to puberty. Multiple regression equations involving age, live weight and backfat thickness at stimulation and growth rate from birth to stimulation were calculated to obtain a prediction equation for the interval from stimulation to puberty. The effects of age and live weight at mating on ovulation rate, embryo survival and number of live embryos 35 days post coitum were not significant.For the gilts on the boars + PG600 treatment, 92% attained puberty within 6 days of treatment, with a non-significant trend to improve with increasing age. Mating rates were similar to those on the boars-only treatment (90%). Ovulation rates were higher (P < 0·001) but embryo survival rates were lower (P < 0·001) in the boars + PG600 group, resulting in similar litter size at 35 days post coitum in the boars-only and boars + PG600 treatments. There was a non-significant trend for litter size to increase with age in the boars + PG600 treatment. Thirty-eight of the gilts treated with hormones failed to conceive and 53% were found by ovarian morphology at slaughter to be cycling normally with a tendency for this proportion to increase with age.

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