Major determinants of fasting heat production and energetic cost of activity in growing pigs of different body weight and breed/castration combination
Open Access
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 79 (6) , 509-517
- https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19980089
Abstract
A total of sixty-five observations on heat production during fasting and physical activity were obtained in four groups of pigs differing in breed and/or castration (Meishan (MC) and Large White (LWC) castrates and Large White (LWM) and Piétrain (PM) males) with body weight (BW) ranging between 25 and 60 kg. Pigs were fed ad libitum before fasting. Heat production was measured using indirect calorimetry. Fasting heat production (FHP) was proportional to the body weight raised to the power 0.55, but with group-specific proportionality parameters (810, 1200, 1220 and 1120kJ/kg BW0.55 per d for MC, LWC, LWM and PM respectively). Group effects could be removed by expressing FHP as a function of muscle, viscera and fat: FHP (kJ/d) = 457(muscle)0.81 + 1969(viscera)0.81 - 644(fat)0.81. It is hypothesized that different breeds with equal muscle and visceral mass, can have different FHP. The negative coefficient for fat would then be the result of a low FHP rather than a cause of it. Because a large part of the variation in tissue composition between groups was due to MC group, a separate equation for the lean groups was established. For lean pigs, FHP could be expressed as a function of muscle and viscera alone: FHP (kJ/d) = 508(muscle)0.66 + 2011(viscera)0.66. Both type of pig and BW affected the number of bouts of physical activities (i.e. standing or sitting) per day, the duration of activity and the total cost of activity. Energetic cost of activity was proportional to the muscle mass raised to the power 0.91 (FHPactivity (kJ/h activity) = 21.0(muscle)0.91). Physical activity represented less than 10% of the total heat production in fasting growing pigs housed alone in metabolic cages and kept in a quiet environment.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dynamic aspects of oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production in swineBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1997
- Do breeds of pig differ in the efficiency with which they use a limiting protein supply?British Journal of Nutrition, 1995
- Heat Production and Quantitative Oxidation of Nutrients by Physical Activity in PigsAnnals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 1994
- Energy cost of standing activity in sowsLivestock Production Science, 1993
- Level of nutrition and visceral organ size and metabolic activity in sheepBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1990
- Measuring the Heat Increment of Activity in Growing-Finishing SwineTransactions of the ASAE, 1988
- The metabolic body size of the growing pigLivestock Production Science, 1982
- The energetic efficiency of metabolismProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1981
- Effect of confinement in a respiration chamber and changes in temperature and plane of nutrition on heat production of 25 kg pigsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1980
- Energy Metabolism in Lines of Pigs Selected for Thickness of Backfat and Rate of GainActa Agriculturae Scandinavica, 1979