Abstract

This study investigated the effect of the feeding behaviour on growth performance, and carcass and meat characteristics of 96 barrows fed ad libitum or restrictively with high or low amino acids (AA) diets according to a 2 × 2 factorial design. The feeding behaviour traits were measured with automated feeders. From 86 kg BW, half of the pigs were given feeds with high indispensable (AA) contents, while the other half received feeds with indispensable AA contents reduced by 9% in early finishing (86–118 kg BW) and by 18% in late finishing (118–145 kg BW). Body lipid and protein retentions were estimated from BW and backfat depth measures recorded at the beginning and end of each period. Pigs were slaughtered at 145 kg BW and carcass and meat quality data were recorded. Phenotypic correlations among feeding behaviours, growth performances, and carcass and meat traits were computed from all the data after adjustment for the effects of feeding treatments. As feeding rate was the behavioural trait most highly correlated with performance and carcass traits, the records of each pig were classified into feeding rate tertiles. Then, the data were statistically analysed using a mixed model, which included feed restriction (FR), AA reduction (AAR), the FR × AAR interaction and the feeding rate tertile as fixed factors, and pen as a random factor. Pigs eating faster (52.1 to 118.9 g/min) had significantly greater final body weights (16%), average daily weight gains (27%), estimated protein gains (22%), estimated lipid retention (46%), carcass weights (16%), weights of lean cuts (14%), weights of fat cuts (21%), proportions of fat in the carcass (14%), and 4% lower proportions of carcass lean cuts than pigs eating slowly (12.6 to 38.2 g/min). Manipulating the eating rate, through management or genetic strategies, could affect feed intake and subsequent growth performance, hence carcass quality, but have little influence on feed efficiency.

Highlights

  • The availability of automated feeding stations enabled the measurement of the feeding behaviour in growing pigs [1]

  • De Haer et al [2] showed that meal size can negatively affect feed digestibility, and that rate of feed intake and meal size are the factors most commonly associated with growth performance, whereas daily eating time and eating frequency are associated with the residual feed intake

  • They found that feed efficiency was negatively correlated with the amount of feed consumed per meal and feeding rate, and that feeding rate was negatively correlated with protein utilisation efficiency

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Summary

Introduction

The availability of automated feeding stations enabled the measurement of the feeding behaviour in growing pigs [1]. De Haer et al [2] showed that meal size can negatively affect feed digestibility, and that rate of feed intake and meal size are the factors most commonly associated with growth performance, whereas daily eating time and eating frequency are associated with the residual feed intake. Andretta et al [11] found that feeding rate and number of meals per day were the variables most closely related to performance results. They found that feed efficiency was negatively correlated with the amount of feed consumed per meal and feeding rate, and that feeding rate was negatively correlated with protein utilisation efficiency

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