Interrelationships of Swine Weights at Three Ages
- 1 May 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 13 (2) , 383-388
- https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1954.132383x
Abstract
The interrelationships of birth, 56-day and 154-day weights for 1894 pigs raised at the Indiana and two Nebraska experiment stations are presented. The average within-litter correlations were. birth-weaning weight 0.53, birth-154-day weight 0.40, and 56-day-154-day weight 0.63. The coefficient of determination (r2) of the 56-day weight on 154 day weight is .40 indicating that a knowledge of 56-day weight accounts for only 40 percent of the variance in 154-day weight. Selecting heavy pigs at 56-days in order to increase weight at 154-days can thus be expected to have only a low efficiency. Due principally to number of pigs, the relationship between total litter weights at 56 and 154 days of age is high. Copyright © . .This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heritability of Gain in Different Growth Periods in SwineJournal of Animal Science, 1953
- Factors Affecting Rate of Gain and Their Relation to Allotment of Pigs for Feeding Trials1Journal of Animal Science, 1946
- Analysis of post-weaning growth in pigsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1939