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Heterosis and its Use in Swine Breeding Systems
Heterosis, or hybrid vigor, is a phenomenon in
which the performance of crossbred progeny exceeds the average of the
parent animals. It is very evident in lowly heritable trains, such as
reproductive efficiency, and therefore is extremely valuable in litter-bearing
species such as swine, where reproductive performance plays a major role
in profitability. Because effect of heterosis can be easily maximized
by proper use of purebred breeding stock, it is a very valuable component
of any pork production system. Proper use of heterosis can improve some
measures of reproductive performance, such as 21-day litter weight, by
up to 27% and has a positive impact on growth and feed efficiency as well.
The following breeding systems utilize purebred
breeding stock in an efficient way to maximize heterosis and therefore
profitability in your operation.
(1)
(1)
(2)
(2)
Terminal Programs (1 and 2)
In terminal programs, crossbred females, either
F1 or three-way cross females, are bred to a purebred terminal boar of
a breed not included in the genetic makeup of the female. All progeny
are sent to market and no breeding gilts are retained from this final
cross, therefore replacement females must either be purchased or produced
in a separate program. This allows the use of purebreds in specialized
roles (i.e. to produce only females or only market hogs) and therefore
the strong characteristics of each breed can be fully utilized.
Advantages
- Maintains 100% heterosis in both sows and market animals
- Provides opportunity to fully utilize each pure breed's strengths
- Produces uniformity of both breeding animals and market hogs, as every
animal has the same genetic makeup
- System is easy to manage if replacement females are purchased and
all animals produced go to market
(3)
(3)
Rotaterminal Program (3)
In the rotaterminal system, two or more breeds are used
in a rotaterminal cross in order to produce females. Maternal breed purebred
boars are used for replacement gilt production, while the females going
into the commercial herd are mated to terminal breed boars, with all progeny
going to market. Approximately 15% of the sowherd must be committed to
female production with the balance (85%) used to produce market animals.
Advantages
- Maintains 100% heterosis in the market animals. If three breeds are
used in the maternal side, maternal heterosis will be 86%, if two breeds
are used heterosis will be 67%
- Provides opportunity to produce replacement females
- Replacement gilts are produced from top sows, ensuring top maternal
performance
- Produces uniform market animals, as all are sired by the same breed
of boar
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