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Swine geneticists developing methods to breed less-aggressive pigsSwine geneticists developing methods to breed less-aggressive pigs

As more pregnant sows are kept in larger groups, reducing aggressive behavior through breeding has become important priority.

June 19, 2017

3 Min Read
Swine geneticists developing methods to breed less-aggressive pigs
Jevtic/iStock/Thinkstock

Michigan State University animal geneticist Juan Steibel is leading a group of researchers to develop methods to breed pigs that are less aggressive. He has received a three-year grant of nearly $1 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food & Agriculture for this project, which is supported by the Michigan Alliance for Animal Agriculture and the National Pork Board.

For centuries, pork producers have bred pigs for desirable physical characteristics, such as faster growth and improved meat quality. Breeding the animals for more desirable social behaviors has proved much more difficult. Aggressive behaviors such as fighting significantly compromise the welfare and productivity of pigs on farms by causing injuries that have negative impacts on both the health and growth of the animals, the university said.

As Michigan’s pork industry voluntarily transitions from separating pregnant female pigs — a practice that eliminated fighting but has been linked to other health and welfare concerns — to keeping them in larger groups by 2020, reducing aggressive behavior through breeding has become an important priority.

“Keeping pigs in larger social groups solves some problems but creates others,” said Steibel, associate professor in the Michigan State department of animal science. “Fortunately, we now have the technology to address those new problems.”

Related:Pig behavior assessments offer clues for housing

Previous research conducted by Steibel and Michigan State animal behavioral scientist Janice Siegford showed a connection between pig genetics and the tendency toward aggressive behavior. Now, Steibel and his colleagues plan to build on that knowledge by developing techniques using cutting-edge video technology to monitor large numbers of pigs at once and determine which ones exhibit less aggression.

The research team is working to program existing video software to recognize individual pigs within a group by subtle differences such as the size and shape of their heads. They are also looking at programming the system to identify instances of aggression, such as pigs standing alongside one another and pressing against and biting others. Researchers at the University of Leuven in Belgium are working on software capable of noting such aggressive interactions.

Another research team based out of Scotland Royal University College is integrating thermal imaging into the video technology. When pigs fight and their blood flow increases, their body temperatures rise. This can be captured by infrared cameras. Incorporating this capability into the system will provide yet another way to identify violent encounters.

Related:Pigs prefer to look at 'companions'

The Michigan State researchers, along with colleagues at the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina, aim to use the data they collect to build new genetic models that will allow breeders to select pigs with characteristics for less aggression and increased performance.

“So far, because data collection has been limited to small numbers of pigs, our breeding models have not been well developed to incorporate information on their social behaviors,” Steibel said. “Aggression has a substantial impact on pig group health, and we want to incorporate that into breeding models alongside traditional performance measures like weight gain. Getting these systems to work well together is very challenging, but now it’s feasible. Ten years ago, I would have called it science fiction.”

This project will give pig breeders their first opportunity to select pigs for beneficial social behaviors at an industrial scale, the university said.

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