Pork Insight Articles

 Industry Partners


Prairie Swine Centre is an affiliate of the University of Saskatchewan


Prairie Swine Centre is grateful for the assistance of the George Morris Centre in developing the economics portion of Pork Insight.

Financial support for the Enterprise Model Project and Pork Insight has been provided by:



Author(s): H. Gonyou and F. Lang
Publication Date: January 20, 2014
Reference: Science of Ethology
Country: Canada

Summary:

Science of Ethology – Volume 1, Issue 6

One of the roles we play in raising livestock is that of social managers of the animals. We decide which animals live
together in a group, and when and how the group is formed. In the case of gestating sows, we decide which sows live with each other during their period of gestation. Our default social group, the one that happens if we disregard our role as managers, would be the breeding cohort. This would include all of the animals that were bred during a set period, which on most farms would be a week.

In previous articles, we have discussed the most common social management decisions, which involve sorting the cohort according to one or more of the following criteria: nutritional needs, competitiveness, or experience with the housing system (particularly ESF). The outcome of this sorting would be multiple groups, each of which is more uniform than the original breeding cohort. Another outcome is that the groups are smaller than the cohort as a whole. These groups are often managed as static groups, that is, no animals are added to a group once it has been formed.

Download PDF »

 
 
Slots Master There is no definite strategy or technique that you can use as you play slots