Er Chiek, Lium Bjørn, Tavornpanich Saraya, Hofmo Peer Ola, Forberg Hilde, Hauge Anna Germundsson, Grøntvedt Carl Andreas, Framstad Tore, Brun Edgar
Norwegian Veterinary Institute, P.O. Box 750, 0106, Oslo, Norway.
Norsvin (Norwegian Pig Breeders Association), P.O. Box 504, 2304, Hamar, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Vet Res. 2014 Dec 4;10:284. doi: 10.1186/s12917-014-0284-6.
Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus infection in Norwegian pigs was largely subclinical. This study tested the hypothesis that the infection causes negligible impact on pigs' growth performance in terms of feed conversion efficiency, daily feed intake, daily growth, age on reaching 100 kg bodyweight and overall feed intake. A sample of 1955 pigs originating from 43 breeding herds was classified into five infection status groups; seronegative pigs (n = 887); seropositive pigs (n = 874); pigs positive for virus at bodyweight between 33 kg and 60 kg (n = 123); pigs positive for virus at bodyweight between 61 kg and 80 kg (n = 34) and pigs positive for virus at bodyweight between 81 kg and 100 kg (n = 37). Each pig had daily recordings of feed intake and bodyweight from 33 kg to 100 kg. Marginal effects of the virus infection on the outcomes were estimated by multi-level linear regression, which accounted for known fixed effects (breed, birthdate, average daily feed intake and growth phase) and random effects (cluster effects of pig and herd).
The seropositive and virus positive pigs had decreased (P value<0.05) growth performance compared to seronegative pigs even though feed intake was not decreased. Reduced feed conversion efficiency led to lower average daily growth, additional feed requirement and longer time needed to reach the 100 kg bodyweight. The effects were more marked (P value<0.03) in pigs infected at a younger age and lasted a longer period. Despite increased feed intake observed, their growth rates were lower and they took more time to reach 100 kg bodyweight compared to the seronegative pigs.
Our study rejected the null hypothesis that the virus infection had negligible adverse effects on growth performance of Norwegian pigs.
挪威猪群中甲型H1N1pdm09流感病毒感染大多为亚临床感染。本研究检验了以下假设:就饲料转化率、每日采食量、日生长量、达到100千克体重时的年龄以及总采食量而言,该感染对猪生长性能的影响可忽略不计。从43个繁殖猪群中选取的1955头猪被分为五个感染状态组;血清阴性猪(n = 887);血清阳性猪(n = 874);体重在33千克至60千克之间的病毒阳性猪(n = 123);体重在61千克至80千克之间的病毒阳性猪(n = 34);体重在81千克至100千克之间的病毒阳性猪(n = 37)。每头猪从33千克到100千克期间都有每日采食量和体重记录。通过多水平线性回归估计病毒感染对各项指标的边际效应,该回归考虑了已知的固定效应(品种、出生日期、平均每日采食量和生长阶段)和随机效应(猪和猪群的聚类效应)。
尽管采食量未降低,但血清阳性和病毒阳性猪与血清阴性猪相比,生长性能下降(P值<0.05)。饲料转化率降低导致平均日生长量降低、额外的饲料需求以及达到100千克体重所需的时间延长。在较年轻阶段感染的猪中,这些影响更为明显(P值<0.03),且持续时间更长。尽管观察到采食量增加,但与血清阴性猪相比,它们的生长速度较低,达到100千克体重所需的时间更长。
我们的研究否定了病毒感染对挪威猪生长性能的不利影响可忽略不计这一原假设。