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. 1990 Aug;31(8):581–583.

Boar culling in swine breeding herds in Minnesota

Sylvie D'Allaire, Allen D Leman
PMCID: PMC1480838  PMID: 17423646

Abstract

This investigation was conducted to study boar culling patterns in swine breeding herds. Data were obtained from 84 swine breeding herds and included 440 boars that were culled. Each producer was involved for 12 consecutive months, and recorded every boar that was removed from the herd, the date, and the reason for culling. The annual culling rate for the 84 farms averaged 59.4% ± 6.4 (SEM). The correlation coefficient between boar and sow culling was 0.52 (p <0.0001). Removal was the result of being overweight (47%), reproductive problems (18%), leg problems (12%), death (7%), and other diseases (4%). From the annual culling rate, the average breeding life of boars was estimated at 20 months. From this study, we concluded that the annual culling rate for boars in commercial herds was high and related to several different factors.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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