This experiment examined whether the pre- or the post-mating diet had greater impact on embryo survival in Meishan gilts. Gilts received either a maintenance (1.15 kg day(-1); n = 12) or a high (3.5 kg day(-1); n = 12) diet during the oestrous cycle preceding mating. After mating, half the animals in each group received either the maintenance or the high diet until slaughter on Day 12. Gilts fed the high pre-mating diet had more corpora lutea (22.7 v. 19.0, SED = 0.98; P<0.001), increased embryo survival (95.5% v. 74.8%, SED = 7.58; P<0.01) and heavier corpora lutea (-0.71 log g v. -0.90 log g, SED = 0.09; P = 0.07) compared with gilts fed the maintenance diet prior to mating. The post-mating diet had no effect on embryo survival. There were no treatment effects on blastocyst developmental stage, luteal surface area or progesterone release. Gilts receiving the high post-mating diet had heavier livers than those fed the maintenance post-mating diet (1.45 v 1.08% of total bodyweight, SED = 0.07; P<0.001), suggesting that these gilts have a greater capacity to metabolize progesterone. Pre-mating nutritional status therefore appears to be a greater determinant of embryo numbers and survival than the post-mating diet.
Low birthweight piglets have an increased incidence of mortality and morbidity. As there are few opportunities to remedy the detrimental consequences of low birthweight after birth, it is important to understand the nature of fetal growth retardation and to identify when low birthweight fetuses deviate from the growth trajectory of their normally grown siblings. The aims of this study were to identify the nature, timing and possible causal factors influencing inadequate fetal growth in Large White x Landrace (LW) and Chinese Meishan (MS) gilts at three stages of pregnancy. Thirty-six per cent of litters contained inadequately grown fetuses. Both intrauterine-growth-restricted (IUGR) and small-for-gestational-age (SGA) fetuses could be identified as early as Day 30 in MS and LW litters and the percentage of litters containing inadequately grown fetuses was similar throughout gestation. MS fetuses, placentas and piglets had less within-litter variation in weight at all stages studied. Inverse relationships were observed between litter size and both minimum and mean weights of MS neonates. No other relationships between fetal size and either uterine position or litter size were observed.
This experiment was designed to determine the effects of a nutritional regime, known to increase embryo survival, on blastocyst development and function. Day 12 blastocysts were recovered from Meishan gilts allocated in a 2x2 factorial design to receive either a high or a maintenance diet before or after mating (n = 4-6 gilts per group). The post-mating diet had no effect on individual blastocyst size, cell number, secretion of oestradiol-17beta or retinol binding protein, glucose metabolism or on the within-litter variability in these measures. Blastocysts recovered from gilts consuming the high pre-mating diet had more cells (13.501 v. 13.006 log cells; SED = 0.23; P = 0.05), greater production of CO2 from glucose (2.19 v. 1.23 log pmol(-1) blastocyst(-1) 3 h(-1), SED = 0.42; P = 0.05) and a lower within-litter standard deviation in blastocyst surface area (0.66 v. 1.18 log mm2, SED = 0.24; P = 0.04) compared with gilts fed the maintenance pre-mating diet. Collectively, these data suggest that a nutritional strategy that increases embryo survival is also associated with an increase in individual blastocyst cell number and reduced within-litter variability in blastocyst size.
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