J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 1989. 67:2698-2708.
© 1989 American Society of Animal Science

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Characterization of Creep Feed Consumption and Its Subsequent Effects on Immune Response, Scouring Index and Performance of Weanling Pigs1

K. L. Barnett2, E. T. Kornegay2, C. R. Risley2, M. D. Lindemann2 and G. G. Schurig3

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg 24061

Abstract

Four trials were conducted to characterize the consumption of creep feed by nursing pigs and the effects of creep feeding (from 10 d to weaning at 28 d) on the immune response, scouring index and subsequent performance of weanling pigs. Pigs were fed a ground 20% CP corn-soybean meal-whey diet with 1.0% chromic oxide (control, 9 litters), this diet with 2.7% ovalbumin added as a dietary antigen (ovalbumin, 14 Utters), or no creep feed (unexposed, 11 litters). At weaning, pigs within a litter were fed a 20% CP corn-soybean meal diet either with or without 2.7% ovalbumin. Creep-fed litters began eating at 11 d of age and disappearance of creep feed increased linearly until weaning (P < .01). However, based on the chromic oxide coloring of the feces, total creep feed consumption was quite variable from pig to pig (13 to 194 g) and from litter to litter (107 to 1,550 g). Preweaning daily gain was similar between creep-fed and noncreep-fed litters; larger litters generally had lower daily gains (P < .09) and less feed disappearance per pig (P < .02). Weekly blood sampling showed that pigs fed the antigen diet had a higher (P < .001) antibody titer to ovalbumin at 14, 21 and 28 d of age than did pigs fed the control diet or pigs unexposed to creep feed. At 56 and 63 d of age, all pigs given an ovalbumin injection at 49 d (1 ml containing 3 mg of ovalbumin) had responded (P < .001) to injection, with the lowest titers for pigs fed the control creep diet and the highest titers for pigs fed the ovalbumin creep diet; titers were intermediate for pigs not fed creep. Regardless of preweaning or postweaning treatment, most pigs began scouring 4 to 5 d postweaning; scouring peaked at d 10 and returned to normal after d 15. Although the magnitude of difference was small, creep-fed pigs tended to scour more than pigs not fed creep (P < .01). Postweaning performance was not influenced by preweaning treatments.


Footnotes

1 Appreciation is expressed to D. R. Notter for help with statistical analyses and to the Virginia Pork Industry Board for financial support.

2 Dept. of Anim. Sci. Send reprint requests to Dr. E. T. Kornegay.

3 Dept. of Pathobiol.




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