Searchable, peer-reviewed, open-access proceedings from bioscience and biomedical conferences

bp0012cpr12 | Genetic Factors Influencing Prolificacy | CPR1985

Selection of breeds, strains and individual pigs for prolificacy

Legault C. ,

Summary. Prolificacy, defined as litter size at birth, is currently considered to be the most important component of sow productivity. However, in spite of a spectacular increase in productivity due to management advances, litter size at birth has remained constant for the past 20 years. This situation seems to question the long-term efficiency of the classical methods of genetic improvement such as within-herd selection and crossbreeding between European...

bp0003rdr25 | Regulation of Gonadal Function | REDR1994

Growth factors and the control of folliculogenesis

Monget P , Monniaux D

There is increasing evidence that growth factors modulate folliculogenesis. However their precise role in the processes of follicular growth, differentiation and atresia is still unknown. Growth factors belong to complex systems, including all the factors structurally and functionally related, their receptor(s) and, in most cases, binding proteins or proteoglycans. In this review, the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) system is presented as a paradigm for the study of other gro...

bp0012cpr9 | Manipulation of The Embryo | CPR1985

Culture and storage of pig embryos

Davis D. L. ,

Summary. Studies have consistently demonstrated that 4-cell pig embryos can be cultured to the blastocyst stage in a simple salt solution containing bovine serum albumin (BSA). Pig embryos appear to be detrimentally affected by lower levels of lactate and pyruvate than are mouse embryos, but in general their in-vitro requirements are similar. Results from embryos cultured between the 4-cell and blastocyst stages are consistent enough to allow the use of c...

bp0012cpr17 | Programmes for Controlled Reproduction | CPR1985

Control of time of parturitionin pigs

Guthrie H. D. ,

Summary. Injection of prostaglandin (PG) F-2ct or its analogues has provided a . technique to induce parturition after Day 110 of gestation in the sow. The mean interval from PG injection to parturition ranges from 24 to 28 h, but only 50-60% of the sows farrow during an 8-10 h working day, and as many as 20% of sows may begin parturition before the injection of PG or > 22 h after the injection. The duration of parturition is positively associated with...

bp0013cpr5 | Nutrition-Metabolism-Reproduction Interactions | CPR1989

Nutritional strategies to optimize reproductionin pigs

Cole D. J. A. ,

Keywords: pigs; nutrition; reproduction; condition; strategy© 1990 Journals of Reproduction & Fertility Ltd...

bp0014cpr3 | Regulation of Oocyte and Embryonic Development in Pigs | CPR1993

Cytoplasmic inheritance and its effects on development and performance

Smith L. C. , Alcivar A. A. ,

In contrast to nuclear inheritance, cytoplasmic inheritance in mammals is derived mostly, if not exclusively, from the maternal line. Mitochondria, and their DNA molecules (mtDNA), are the genetic units of this method of inheritance. Mammalian mtDNA codes for 13 enzymes used in the mitochondrial energy-generating pathway, oxidative phosphorylation, 22 tRNAs and two rRNAs. Although all transcripts of mtDNA and their translational products remain in the mitochondria, most ...

bp0016cpr19 | Gestation and Parturition | CPR2001

Endocrine regulation of periparturient behaviour in pigs

Gilbert C. L.

Pigs begin behavioural preparations for birth about 1-2 days before parturition. Prepartum sows wander to select a suitable site and then construct a maternal nest. The signal that initiates this behavioural cascade probably results from fetal maturation but is unknown. However, endogenous PGF2a appears to be involved early on in an endocrine pathway that projects to the brain and can generate most of the prepartum behavioural components. This period of intense activity ...