Abstract
The development of stable suckling order, the incidence of fighting when suckling, weight gain during the suckling period, and the severity of facial wounding were studied with litters of piglets in which the canine and lateral incisor teeth were either clipped at birth or left intact. Facial wounding was largely confined to litters with unclipped teeth. Severity of wounding correlated with the observed incidence of fighting on the udder (P<0·01); and both wounding and fighting were more common among litters comprising a large number of piglets (P<0·05). When the effect of litter size was taken into account, there were no substantial differences in weight gain to 3 weeks between piglets with high and low scores for facial wounding, nor between clipped and unclipped litters. Piglets which habitually occupied the most anterior or most posterior teats had less facial wounding than middle-suckling piglets, and showed greater consistency in teat choice. No gross differences between clipped and unclipped litters were observed in the development of stable suckling order during the first week of life. It is concluded that the ‘eye’ teeth, although used in disputes over teat choice, have little influence on the frequency of such disputes or on the original development of stable suckling order.